Fitch Sees Muted Impact From South Africa Measures to Boost Growth

Published 2018-10-25, 12:46 p/m
© Bloomberg. Tito Mboweni, South Africa's finance minister, gestures as he heads to parliament to present his mid-term budget in Cape Town, South Africa.

(Bloomberg) -- The impact of spending reprioritization announced in South Africa’s mid-term budget is to unlikely meaningfully boost economic growth, Fitch Ratings Ltd. said.

Finance Minister Tito Mboweni plans to redirect 32.4 billion rand ($2.3 billion) of spending over the next three years to target projects aimed at igniting economic growth, allocating funds to “faster-spending programs,” incentives for the clothing and textile industries and public-works projects. These and other growth-enhancing measures announced in President Cyril Ramaphosa’s stimulus plan last month “are also unlikely to significantly alter the growth trajectory,” Fitch said in an emailed statement Thursday.

Africa’s most-industrialized economy fell into a recession in the second quarter and hasn’t expanded at more than 2 percent annually since 2013. Mboweni’s mid-term budget more than halved the growth forecast for the year to 0.7 percent, and raised the projections for the budget shortfall and debt.

While these and the lower revenue projections are “more realistic”, it doesn’t contain significant offsetting fiscal measures, Fitch said. That pushes the prospect of debt stabilization further into the future, the company said.

Fitch affirmed its BB+ assessment of South Africa’s debt, with a stable outlook, in June. It cut the rating to sub-investment grade in April 2017.

“The rating reflects persistent low-trend growth,” Fitch said on Thursday. “The evolution of fiscal policy in response to the recession and political and social pressures will remain an important part of our sovereign-rating assessment.”

© Bloomberg. Tito Mboweni, South Africa's finance minister, gestures as he heads to parliament to present his mid-term budget in Cape Town, South Africa.

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