South Africa’s structural reform drive under Operation Vulindlela could raise real economic output by as much as 9% over the medium term and lift annual growth towards 3%, according to the International Monetary Fund. The projection forms part of the IMF’s latest Article IV consultation, which assessed the progress of reforms launched in 2020 to address constraints in electricity, logistics and water infrastructure.
The IMF said sustained implementation would be critical, noting that reliable power supply, efficient rail corridors and functional ports remain central to competitiveness. Years of load-shedding reduced output and deterred investment, while freight bottlenecks constrained mineral and agricultural exports. South Africa’s GDP expanded by just 0.6% in 2024, reflecting structural limitations and subdued private sector confidence.
Operation Vulindlela has focused on enabling private participation in energy generation, reforming rail and port access to encourage competition, and improving water service delivery at municipal level. The IMF estimated that closing half the gap between South Africa and emerging market best practice in these sectors could generate significant output gains, supporting employment and easing pressure on public finances.
READ – What the IMF said about South Africa
The reform agenda coincides with changes to the monetary framework. The IMF noted that the adoption of a 3% inflation target has reinforced policy credibility, helping to anchor expectations and lower borrowing costs. Inflation is projected to average 3.3% in 2025 and stabilise around 3% from 2027.
However, the Fund cautioned that fiscal consolidation remains essential. Stabilising public debt near 70% of GDP will require a primary surplus of 1.5% in the 2026 financial year. That target depends on expenditure restraint, wage bill management, stronger procurement controls and improved oversight of state-owned enterprises.
The IMF now expects growth of 1.3% in 2025 and 1.4% in 2026, rising gradually to 1.8% by the end of the decade. While these forecasts remain modest, the Fund’s assessment indicates that sustained reform momentum could materially alter South Africa’s economic trajectory.

