EFF statement on the second quarter 2022 GDP
6 September 2022
The Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) is not shocked by the decrease in real gross domestic product as shown by the second quarter 2022 gross domestic product data released by Statistics South Africa. South Africa's GDP decreased by 0.7% in the second quarter of 2022. Cyril Ramaphosa and the collective incompetent and useless Cabinet and the governing party have demonstrated beyond doubt, that they do not possess the capacity to reorganise South Africa's economy. What is more shocking is the determination and willingness to handover decision-making powers to the unregulated racist capitalist class at the hands of the few white men who control the economy.
The second quarter GDP data clearly demonstrates that the decrease is in all important sectors that have the capacity to reorganise and reignite South Africa's economy. The decrease in manufacturing, agriculture, mining, trade, catering, and accommodation is a sign that the decrease in the GDP is far reaching, and evident of an economy that is not producing goods and services. The decrease in government expenditure is a result of misguided austerity fiscal policy that has consistently undermined efforts to increase the number of teachers, policemen and women, doctors, nurses and other key professionals that make up the core of state capacity.
The EFF warned about the misguided celebration of the decreased unemployment rate from 34.5% in the first quarter to 33.9% in the second quarter because there was no coordinated clear intervention to address an economy that has reached its lowest levels of crisis. The reality is that it is premature to celebrate an unemployment rate decrease when the actual number of unemployed people increased from 7.8 million to 7.9 million.
South Africa's economy, on its current path, will not experience any positive, sustainable and meaningful growth because very few entrusted with the responsibility of formulating economic policy are hellbent on neoliberalism. The majority of working-class families are highly indebted and are struggling to afford basic things like food and housing. The obsession of the South African Reserve Bank to increase interest rates beyond record levels is strangling any effort to revive the economy on a growth path.