SA’s once mighty steel and chrome manufacturing sectors have been consigned to government’s frail care unit, with urgent efforts to try keep them afloat. Picture: AdobeStock The ZAR traded at R16.51 to the USD last week, capping off a 13% rally against the greenback over the past year. In the same week, the Absa Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) shows a manufacturing sector in deep trouble, with the index declining by 1.5 points to 40.5 in December – its lowest level since the Covid shock in 2020.
An index below 50 signals a contraction in economic activity. Above 50, the economy is expanding. There’s a clear disconnected between the ZAR-USD exchange rate and weak economic fundamentals at home.
Lower inventories and a decline in the employment index were the main reasons for the PMI drop. There seems little evidence that lower interest rates and declining inflation are showing up on the factory floor. Minerals exports reported an exceptional year, primarily from rocketing precious metals prices.
Read Full Article on The Citizen
[paywall]
Elsewhere, it was a different story. SA’s once mighty steel and chrome manufacturing sectors have been consigned to government’s frail care unit, with urgent plans to introduce reduced electricity tariffs to keep them afloat. RThis is part of a package of measures intended to reverse the deindustrialisation of SA.
Other measures include a proposed new tax on chrome exports and a block exemption under the Competition Act to allow distressed industries to collaborate in areas such as infrastructure sharing and energy purchases, without violating anti-trust rules. Despite recent improvements at Eskom and the Transnet rail network, the decades-long neglect at both these state-owned companies has stifled growth.
[/paywall]