We are in a transformational economic crisis, as this is not merely one of a collapsing asset bubble in one of the world’s leading financial capitals but one that has an impact on all of us. The crisis runs much deeper than that as it will fundamentally change everything about our everyday life. As such, how we deal with it will need much more than just bailing out troubled industries or waiting out the storm; we are going to have to reimagine the SA economy and not rehash old thinking.
We entered the “great lockdown” on the back foot; our problems ran deep. We were weighed down by a state-owned electricity company in Eskom that simply couldn’t provide energy for an economy growing at under 1% and had reinstated bouts of load-shedding since the middle of December.
Under an environment that promised little in the way of growth for the rest of the year and into next, it was clear that ratings agency Moody’s Investors Service would pull the final trigger and see us fall into full blown “junk” status in our credit ratings. Our economy fit the textbook definition of one in recession, with contractions in GDP growth during the final two quarters of 2019.
When we were forced into lockdown to ensure our health services could gear themselves up for a full-blown coronavirus outbreak that is still some months off its peak, we all went into this period knowing that our economic scars may prove deeper than most. Still, it was the right and only thing to do in the face of a global pandemic that has cost the lives of about 248,000 globally and more than 130 locally.
