Economy of South Africa
The economy of South Africa is a mixed economy, emerging market, and upper-middle-income economy, one of only eight such countries in Africa. The economy is the most industrialized, technologically advanced, and diversified economy in Africa. Following 1996, at the end of over twelve years of international sanctions, South Africa's nominal gross domestic product (GDP) almost tripled to a peak of US$416 billion in 2011. In the same period, foreign exchange reserves increased from US$3 billion to nearly US$50 billion, creating a diversified economy with a growing and sizable middle class, within two decades of ending apartheid.
Johannesburg, the financial capital of South Africa | |
Currency | South African rand (ZAR, R) |
---|---|
| |
Trade organisations | AU, WTO, BRICS, AfCFTA, G-20, SACU and others |
Country group |
|
Statistics | |
Population |
|
GDP |
|
GDP rank |
|
GDP growth |
|
GDP per capita |
|
GDP per capita rank |
|
GDP by sector |
|
4.5% (2024) | |
Population below poverty line |
|
61.8 very high (2021) | |
| |
Labour force |
|
Labour force by occupation |
|
Unemployment |
|
Main industries | mining (world's largest producer of platinum group metals, gold, chromium), automobile manufacturing, metalworking, technology, machinery, textiles, iron and steel, IT, chemicals, fertiliser, foodstuffs, manufacturing, commercial ship repair. |
External | |
Exports |
|
Export goods | gold, diamonds, wines, iron ore, platinum, nonferrous metals, electronics, machinery and manufactured equipment, motor vehicles, fruits, various agricultural foodstuffs, ground and air military hardware. |
Main export partners | |
Imports |
|
Import goods | machinery and equipment, chemicals, petroleum products, scientific instruments, foodstuffs |
Main import partners | |
FDI stock |
|
−$1.046 billion (2023 Q3 est.) | |
Gross external debt | $156.1 billion ( 2023 est.) |
Public finances | |
Government debt | 75.8% of GDP (2024 est.) |
−4.4% (of GDP) (2017 est.) | |
Revenues | $122.49 billion (2022 est.) |
Expenses | $139.28 billion (2022 est.) |
Credit rating |
|
| |
All values, unless otherwise stated, are in US dollars. |
Although the natural resource extraction industry remains one of the largest in the country with an annual contribution to the GDP of US$13.5 billion, the economy of South Africa has diversified since the end of apartheid, particularly towards services. In 2019, the financial industry contributed US$41.4 billion to South Africa's GDP. In 2021, South Africa-based financial institutions managed more than US$1.41 trillion in assets. The total market capitalization of the Johannesburg Stock Exchange is US$1.28 trillion as of October 2021.
The state-owned enterprises of South Africa play a significant role in the country's economy, with the government owning a share in around 700 SOEs involved in a wide array of important industries. In 2016 according to business executives, the top five challenges to doing business in the country were inefficient government bureaucracy, restrictive labour regulations, a shortage of skilled workers for some high-tech industries, political instability, and corruption. On the other hand, the country's banking sector was rated as a strongly positive feature of the economy. The nation is among the G20, and is the only African country that is a permanent member of the group.