Cape Times

Tourism industry hopeful after GDP delivers economic growth rate of 4.6%

Ramping-up is necessary to achieve growth forecast of 4.2 percent this year on Covid disruption

- SIPHOKAZI VUSO siphokazi.vuso@inl.co.za

THE tourism industry says it’s hopeful for a recovery following the release of the gross domestic product (GDP) figures for the first quarter of 2021, which shows an economic growth rate of 4.6%.

The tourism industry suffered a massive blow over the past year and a half when the global Coronaviru­s pandemic hit, with many businesses struggling to keep their doors open, and which resulted in job losses.

Stats SA reported yesterday that the GDP grew by 1% in the first quarter of 2021, translatin­g into an annualised growth rate of 4.6%, showing that the country was recovering from the pandemic.

Mayco member for economic opportunit­ies James Vos said the statistics were cause for “cautious optimism”.

“We are constantly implementi­ng measures to drive the various stages of economic recovery and industry readiness. A few months ago we put together the Tourism Task Team to get the industry through these tough times, and also focus on future prospects,” he said.

Vos said as a result they had seen the hospitalit­y and tourism sectors “claw back gains” after a tough 2020.

“Domestic flights to Cape Town Internatio­nal Airport rose 66% in the first half of May, the strongest recovery since the resumption of local flights in June 2020. Restaurant­s and local tourism providers have seen a resultant uptick in business.

“If tourism is going to build back better, communitie­s, government­s and the tourism industry must come up with a transforma­tive plan that is workable and helps drive traveller behaviour change. The pandemic has given us a chance for a reset

– we should make the most of the opportunit­y,” he said.

Economic researcher at the Solidarity Research Institute Theuns du Buisson said the solution to SA’s plight was less regulation.

“It is still possible to turn matters around and reform the economy. Unnecessar­y and obstructiv­e regulation­s should be summarily scrapped. By regulating less, everyone can get the opportunit­y to become part of building up SA instead of everyone just sharing in the decline,” Du Buisson said.

DA Western Cape spokespers­on for Tourism MPL Deidré Baartman said the achievemen­t of population immunity, so that more countries could add SA to their “safe” lists, had to be prioritise­d.

SOUTH Africa’s economy will have to ramp-up activity in order to achieve the growth forecast of 4.2 percent in 2021 as Covid-19 continued to impact growth.

Data from Statistics South Africa (StatsSA) yesterday revealed that the economy failed to expand at a quicker pace in the first three months of this year.

Headline gross domestic product (GDP) grew 1.1 percent in the first quarter of 2021, translatin­g into an annualised growth rate 4.6 percent.

StatsSA said key sectors of finance, mining and trade expanded and were the main drivers of output on the production side of the economy.

However, agricultur­e, forestry and fishing contracted on weaker production in field crops and animal products due to load shedding and a decline in the supply of water.

Though the GDP print was above market expectatio­ns, it fell lower than the revised annualised 5.8 percent rise recorded in the fourth quarter of 2020.

Statistici­an-General Risenga Maluleke said the Covid-19 pandemic and subsequent lockdown restrictio­ns caused significan­t disruption­s to the economy.

Maluleke said despite the third consecutiv­e quarter of positive growth, the economy was 2.7 percent smaller than it was in the first quarter of 2020.

“Economic activity has increased since then, in line with easing lockdown restrictio­ns, with real GDP rising to R761 billion in the first quarter of 2021,” he said.

“We are almost back to the level we were in the first quarter of 2016 as the economy is 2.7 percent down from the R782bn recorded in the first quarter of 2020.”

The economy was pushed into a deep contractio­n of 7.2 percent in 2020 due to the Covid-19 pandemic and its associated lockdown restrictio­ns.

PPS Investment­s portfolio manager Reza Hendrickse said the economy had some way to go to restore what had been lost as current levels of activity were still only back to 2016 levels.

“This calls for one to perhaps critically assess prospects going forward, particular­ly given the cyclical tailwinds from forces external to South Africa,” Hendrickse said.

This GDP reading comes just a week after the country’s unemployme­nt rate rose to a record 32.6 percent, which will put additional pressure on consumer spending.

However, StatsSA said household final consumptio­n expenditur­e rose by 4.7 percent in the first quarter driven largely by clothing, footwear and furniture while spending at restaurant­s and hotels declined.

Citadel’s chief economist Maarten Ackerman said these numbers might be promising but the economy had somewhat flat-lined three years prior to Covid-19.

Ackerman said if the steady growth continued, the country might reach pre-Covid levels by the end of the year.

“South Africa needs to grow at a rate of over 2.5 percent to thrive,” Ackerman said.

The country’s recovery has also been pegged to the successful roll-out of the Covid-19 vaccine programme, which appears to be flounderin­g at the moment.

Investec’s Lara Hodes said over and above that, it was critical that the government increases the supply of electricit­y and water, and improves port activity substantia­lly.

“Timeous roll-out of the Covid19 vaccinatio­n programme and other areas of flagging state infrastruc­ture and systems remains imperative,” she said.

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 ??  ?? DATA FROM Statistics South Africa yesterday revealed that the economy failed to expand at a quicker pace in the first three months of this year. | Supplied
DATA FROM Statistics South Africa yesterday revealed that the economy failed to expand at a quicker pace in the first three months of this year. | Supplied
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