Fitch’s upgrade of South Africa’s long-term local and foreign currency ratings to BB from BB- on 5 June marks a meaningful vote of confidence in the country’s fiscal management and reform programme.
However, the latest EY Macroeconomic Outlook cautions that the positive signal does not remove the immediate challenges facing the economy.
“While the upgrade is a welcome validation of reform progress, it does not change the fact that near-term growth will remain constrained by higher borrowing costs and subdued domestic demand,” said Angelika Goliger, EY Africa Chief Economist.
The upgrade, which follows improved outlooks from S&P Global and Moody’s, comes at a time when global growth forecasts have been revised lower and domestic inflation pressures have re-emerged. EY’s analysis suggests the move could gradually support investor sentiment and help moderate risk premiums over time.
Headline inflation rose to 4.0% year-on-year in April, driven largely by higher fuel prices amid oil trading near USD 100 per barrel. In response, the South African Reserve Bank raised the repo rate to 7.0% in May and adopted a clearly hawkish, higher-for-longer stance.
“The re-acceleration in inflation, driven largely by imported fuel costs, has forced the SARB into a more pre-emptive stance. We expect rates to stay higher for longer than previously anticipated,” Goliger added.
GDP grew 0.5% quarter-on-quarter in Q1, extending the expansion to six consecutive quarters, yet underlying demand remains subdued, with household consumption and investment both soft and manufacturing output still contracting.
Sectoral implications highlighted in the Outlook include:
– Finance: While tighter liquidity and higher funding costs are expected in the short term, the rating upgrade could eventually support improved access to capital and lower risk premiums for banks and corporates.
– Infrastructure: Elevated input costs from fuel and higher borrowing rates may weigh on project economics, even as reform momentum continues.
– Consumer Goods & Industrials: Margin pressure is likely to persist through 2026 due to weak export demand, rising costs and subdued consumer spending, requiring continued focus on efficiency and pricing discipline.
“For businesses, the key takeaway is that stability in the macro framework is improving, but operational resilience and cost discipline will be critical through the rest of 2026,” Goliger noted.
The Outlook concludes that translating the rating upgrade into stronger growth will depend on maintaining reform momentum, managing second-round inflation risks, and navigating ongoing geopolitical and commodity price volatility.

