Middle Eastern military escalation is threatening to torpedo South Africa's fragile economic recovery through surging oil prices and stalled rate cuts.
Dr. Nzimande's economic warning
Dr. Nzimande's economic warning
- University of Johannesburg economist Dr Ntokozo Nzimande flagged fuel, food, and borrowing costs all spiking.
- Nzimande says inflation could blow past the target range entirely.
- South Africa's Reserve Bank may freeze or reverse its rate-cutting campaign.
- Repo rate currently sits at 6.75%, with prime lending at 10.25%.
- Around 20% of global oil trade flows through that narrow waterway.
- South Africa imports roughly 80% of its crude from the Middle East.
- Brent crude already jumped 8 to 13%, landing near 80 to 82 USD a barrel.
- Even a brief disruption would keep prices elevated for months.
- Diesel hikes slam freight companies, and those costs get passed to shoppers.
- Gulf-region natural gas instability could spike global fertiliser prices.
- Bread, milk, meat, and vegetables all travel by road or rail.
- Households already stretched thin would absorb another painful round of increases.
- Middle Eastern airspace closures are disrupting international flight routes badly.
- Tourism contributes about 7% to South Africa's GDP.
- Longer, pricier routes would hammer an industry employing young and unskilled workers.
- Nzimande compared the disruption scale to post-9/11 and COVID-era lockdowns.