JOHANNESBURG, 24 JUNE 2020 – The road to the metals and engineering (M&E)
sector’s post-Covid-19 recovery will be long and will require extraordinary and targeted
policies to walk the tightrope towards an economic reboot, according to Steel and
Engineering Industries Federation of Southern Africa (SEIFSA) Chief Economist Michael
Ade.
main trading partners. He said all of these factors combined had led to continued further
sector’s coming out of the doldrums include low domestic demand, erratic power supply, rising administered prices, exchange rate volatility, generally low productivity levels, capacity under-utilisation, declining net operating surpluses and high import penetration.
forecast, released in our State of the Metals and Engineering (M&E) Sector Report 2020-
2021 in January, has been significantly revised downward from 0.6 percent mild growth
to -9.1 percent deceleration due to stagnant local demand, the COVID-19 pandemic,
downwardly volatile production numbers and the prevalence of significant sector-specific
downside risks,” Dr Ade said.
urgent need for health and economic policy action – including global cooperation – to
cushion its consequences, protect vulnerable populations and improve countries’
capacity to prevent and cope with similar events in future.
policies and undertake the necessary reforms to support long-term growth and demand
prospects,” Dr Ade said.
demand, before showing a modest increase in 2021. The rebound in metals prices is
expected to be driven by a recovery in Chinese demand, which accounts for around 50
percent of the consumption of base metals.
Local economic outlook
Domestically, Dr Ade said although the economy was already performing poorly in recent
times, underpinned by two recent technical recessions in 2018 and 2019, the domestic
disruptions at the end of Q1 2020 and large parts of Q2 can mainly be attributed to the
COVID-19 pandemic.
business, investor and consumer confidence. Also, the swift fall in global travel as a result
expectation of economic output in the M&E macroeconomic framework.
“SEIFSA does not expect a robust rebound in output for the broader manufacturing sector,
including its diverse M&E cluster of industries, for the rest of 2020. Although there will be
some level of growth largely underpinned by a weaker rand and rebounding exports, it will
be weak due to poor production fundamentals, capacity under-utilisation and high volatility in production data from 2014,” Dr Ade said.
exists for local companies to increase exports to the rest of Africa and mitigate losses from the pandemic.
resources to immediately increase exports share regionally and the new export
development course offered by SEIFSA will provide some leverage to beleaguered
businesses during these tough times,” he concluded.