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World Bank cuts SA growth forecast

10 Jan, 2020 - 00:01 0 Views

eBusiness Weekly

The World Bank is the first key institution to cut its economic growth forecast for South Africa to below 1 percent for 2020 due to electricity supply concerns.

It now expects the economy to expand by 0.9% this year, the Washington-based lender said Wednesday in its Global Economic Prospects report. That compares with an estimate of 1% in its Africa Pulse report released in October and is well below government forecasts. Its outlook for Africa’s most-industrialised economy is “markedly weaker” because it sees electricity supply and infrastructure constraints inhibiting domestic growth with weaker global economic conditions weighing on export demand.

The bank’s revision comes as Eskom, which generates about 95 percent of the country’s electricity, resumes rolling blackouts earlier than expected. The power cuts threaten to drag on an economy stuck in the longest downward cycle since 1945 and that hasn’t expanded by more than 2 percent annually since 2013.

The debt-laden power utility, described by Goldman Sachs as the biggest threat to South Africa’s economy, put the country at risk of a second recession in as many years after it implemented the most severe power cuts to date in December. Gross domestic product growth likely slowed to 0,4 percent in 2019, the World Bank said.

The World Bank sees GDP growth averaging 1,4 percent in 2021-22 if President Cyril Ramaphosa’s administration is able to ramp up structural reforms and address policy uncertainty, and if there’s a recovery in public and private sector investment. — Fin24.com

 

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