South Africa may be entering a rare virtuous economic cycle, a self-reinforcing loop where stronger growth feeds confidence, investment, and further gains. The last time the country experienced such a phase was in the early to mid-2000s, when GDP growth averaged above 4%.
Since then, the picture has been bleak: growth has averaged just 0.8% over the past decade, well below population growth, weighed down by corruption, collapsing state-owned enterprises, and fiscal deterioration.
Analysts point to a convergence of global and domestic factors:
- Rising commodity prices, especially platinum and gold, which underpin South Africa’s export earnings.
- Early reforms at Eskom and Transnet hinting at improved infrastructure and logistics capacity.
- Lower inflation and interest rates boost disposable income and corporate balance sheets.
- A stronger rand, reducing imported costs, including fuel, which eases household and business pressures.
The Flywheel Effect
Sanlam Private Wealth CIO David Lerche explains the mechanics:
- Higher commodity prices → stronger terms of trade → rand appreciation.
- Stronger rand → lower inflation → room for rate cuts.
- Rate cuts → lower debt costs → more spending and investment.
- Rising tax revenues from mining royalties → healthier state finances → improved credit profile and borrowing costs.
If managed prudently, this cycle can become self-sustaining, attracting more investment, creating jobs, and strengthening long-term growth.
The Risks
The opportunity is fragile. Potential derailers include:
- Coalition breakdowns in domestic politics.
- Resurgence of load-shedding or policy drift.
- External shocks such as falling metal prices, rising oil, or geopolitical turmoil.
- Global slowdown that curbs demand for exports.
South Africa has often been trapped in a vicious cycle of low growth, rising debt, and crumbling infrastructure. The coming years will test whether the country can break the pattern. If the virtuous cycle holds, it could mark the most significant turnaround in nearly two decades.



