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    Home » Farms and Finance Rescue SA Economy 
    AGRICULTURE

    Farms and Finance Rescue SA Economy 

    March 10, 2026
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    Risenga Maluleke is the current Statistician-General of South Africa
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    South Africa’s economy expanded by 1.1% in 2025, its fastest rate in three years, as a broad recovery across agriculture, trade, and financial services offset persistent weakness in mining and manufacturing.

    According to Bloomberg, the figure — released by Statistics South Africa in Pretoria on Tuesday — marks a significant improvement on the 0.5% growth recorded in 2024 and is the strongest annual expansion since 2022, when the economy grew 2.1%.

    The result is notable precisely because of the context surrounding it. South Africa’s economy has averaged less than 1% annual growth for more than a decade, a structural underperformance driven by electricity shortages, logistics failures at ports and rail, and a sustained retreat in private investment. The 2025 figure does not resolve those constraints, but it reflects the cumulative effect of a reform agenda that has gradually improved business conditions — most visibly through the end of load-shedding, which eased pressure on manufacturing and boosted consumer and investor confidence during the year.

    Seven of South Africa’s ten economic sectors contributed to growth in 2025. Agriculture was the standout, expanding 17.4% over the full year on the back of strong horticulture and animal products output. Agriculture carried over its positive momentum through consecutive quarterly increases, underpinned by stronger production of field crops, horticulture and animal products. Trade, catering and accommodation grew 2.3%, finance rose 1.9%, and transport expanded 0.8% — a set of results that reflects the degree to which South Africa’s tertiary sector now dominates economic output. As reported by Statistics South Africa, the services sector accounts for approximately 70% of total GDP, with financial services alone contributing 23%.

    The fourth quarter provided a stronger-than-expected close to the year. GDP expanded 0.4% in the three months to December, ahead of the 0.3% median forecast from a Bloomberg survey of 11 economists, and slightly above the revised 0.3% recorded in the third quarter. Growth in that final quarter was driven largely by finance, which expanded 1.4%, and trade, which rose 0.9%. Nedbank’s economic unit had been among the more optimistic forecasters, noting that high-frequency data pointed to services as the primary source of momentum, driven by robust activity in domestic trade and finance, while agriculture likely ended the year on firmer ground even as mining, manufacturing and electricity remained under pressure. 

    The reform narrative is gaining traction in official projections. The National Treasury forecasts growth of 1.6% for 2026, rising to 2% by 2028 — a trajectory that assumes continued progress on energy security, port and rail rehabilitation, and private sector investment. PSG Financial Services chief economist Johan Els pointed to almost permanently lower inflation and anticipated interest rate cuts as key structural enablers, while cautioning that higher oil prices and global geopolitical risks could defer some of the monetary easing initially expected earlier in the year. His 2026 growth projection sits at approximately 1.9%, contingent on ongoing improvements in electricity availability and logistics infrastructure. According to CNBC Africa, a 2026 growth rate in that range is plausible but remains sensitive to the global environment, particularly energy price movements linked to Middle East tensions.

    The 1.1% outcome is a step forward, but it remains well below the 5% to 6% growth rate that economists broadly consider necessary to make meaningful inroads into South Africa’s 32% unemployment rate. The trajectory is improving, and the conditions for acceleration are more favourable than at any point in the past decade — but the distance between current performance and what is required to address the country’s structural social challenges remains considerable.

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