A drive to establish white farmers from SA throughout the African continent has commenced.
SA weathers recession
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Tue, 28 Jul 2009 08:27
South Africa is weathering the global recession and credit
crunch "quite well" compared to its rating peers, ratings agency
Fitch said on Monday.
This was despite its predictions that the country's gross
domestic product (GDP) would fall one to two percent this year, it
said in a statement.
Political risk had also eased since April's smooth transfer of
power to President Jacob Zuma.
"However, the post-election political landscape and its
implications for policy is still unfolding, at a time when the
budget deficit is rising sharply and the current account deficit,
while diminished, remains large and presents continuing financing
challenges."
On Monday, Fitch Ratings affirmed the country as 'BBB+' (lower
Medium grade) but said the outlook remained negative.
"South Africa's ratings have been on negative outlook since
November 2008 when Fitch took negative rating action on a number of
major emerging markets in the face of the
sudden and fast
deterioration of the global economic environment in the second half
of last year."
South Africa had been affected mainly through trade and capital
flows channels — investors pulled alot of money out of the stock
market in the fourth quarter of 2008. There was also a sharp
weakening of the currency.
Though flows into the stock market had since returned and the
rand had recovered most of the ground lost since March 2009, the
combined impact of the global recession and a domestic cyclical
downturn would be more "broadly" felt in 2009.
The budget deficit could approach six percent of GDP in the
current fiscal year and remain high, albeit declining, in the next
two years.
Fitch expected the government debt ratio to rise from a low of
27 percent in the fiscal year 2008 to around one-third by the
fiscal year 2010.
Several years of prudent fiscal policy had given South Africa
fiscal space to weather a temporary
increase in the budget deficit,
Fitch added.
However, the increase in debt of the broader public sector,
which included non-financial public enterprises, would be much
starker, as infrastructure spending was stepped up.