Exports and domestic vehicle sales beat projections last year, despite flooding in KwaZulu-Natal, a strike at rail operator Transnet that interrupted shipments and a hike in borrowing costs by the central bank. More than 70% of the industry’s exports last year went to Europe.
While a weaker exchange rate should support exports this year, domestic sales will face headwinds in an economy that’s projected to grow less than 1% in 2023 and 2024. The impact of the economic downturn, protracted geopolitical conflict risks and power cuts which affect cost and the ability to do business in South Africa, remain major concerns for 2023, Naamsa said. However, prospects for vehicle shipment growth remain optimistic on the back of further new model introductions by major exporters in the domestic market, the council said. In times of uncertainty you need journalism you can trust.
_Business This has always been the business model! And damn the local market is part of the same model
_Business See how these exports stop and unemployment rises when the West sanction SA for sleeping with Russia and China...
_Business AND sell them overseas for less than half what they cost locally.. 🤨
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Source: ITOnlineSA - 🏆 16. / 63 Read more »