South Africa Economy:
South Africa is a middle-income, emerging market with an abundant supply of natural resources; well-developed financial, legal, communications, energy, and transport sectors; a stock exchange that ranks among the 10 largest in the world; and a modern infrastructure supporting an efficient distribution of goods to major urban centers throughout the region. However, growth has not been strong enough to lower South Africa's high unemployment rate; and daunting economic problems remain from the apartheid era, especially poverty and lack of economic empowerment among the disadvantaged groups. South African economic policy is fiscally conservative, but pragmatic, focusing on targeting inflation and liberalizing trade as means to increase job growth and household income.
GDP (purchasing power parity): $491.4 billion (2004 est.)
GDP — real growth rate: 3.5% (2004 est.)
GDP — per capita: purchasing power parity: $11,100 (2004 est.)
GDP — composition by sector: agriculture: 3.6% industry: 31.2% services: 65.2% (2004)
Labor force: 16.63 million (2004 est.)
Labor force — by occupation: agriculture: 30%, industry: 25%, services: 45% (1999 est.)
Unemployment rate: 26.2% (includes workers no longer looking for employment) (2004 est.)
Population below poverty line: 50% (2000 est.)
Household income or consumption by percentage share: lowest 10%: 1.1% highest 10%: 45.9% (1994)
Distribution of family income — Gini index: 59.3 (1993-94 est.)
Inflation rate (consumer prices): 4.5% (2004 est.)
Budget: revenues: $47.43 billion (2004 est.) expenditures: $52.54 billion including capital expenditures of NA (2004 est.)
Public debt: 45.9% of GDP (2004 est.)
Agriculture — products: Corn, wheat, sugarcane, fruits, vegetables; beef, poultry, mutton, wool, dairy products
Industries: mining (world's largest producer of platinum, gold, chromium), automobile assembly, metalworking, machinery, textile, iron and steel, chemicals, fertilizer, foodstuffs, commercial ship repair
Industrial production growth rate: 5.5% (2004 est.)
Electricity — production: 202.6 billion kWh (2002 est.)
Electricity — consumption: 189.4 billion kWh (2002 est.)
Electricity — exports: 6.95 billion kWh (2002 est.)
Electricity — imports: 7.87 billion kWh (2002 est.)
Oil — production: 196,200 bbl/day (2001 est.)
Oil — consumption: 460,000 bbl/day (2001 est.)
Oil — exports: NA
Oil — imports: NA
Oil — proved reserves: 7.84 million bbl (1 January 2002 est.)
Natural gas — production: 1.8 billion cu m (2001 est.)
Natural gas — consumption: 1.8 billion cu m (2001 est.)
Natural gas — exports: 0 cu m (2001 est.)
Natural gas — imports: 0 cu m (2001 est.)
Natural gas — proved reserves: 14.16 billion cu m (1 January 2002 est.)
Current account balance: $-2.48 million (2004 est.)
Exports: $41.97 billion (f.o.b. 2004 est.)
Exports — commodities: gold, diamonds, platinum, other metals and minerals, machinery and equipment (1998 est.)
Exports — partners: US 10.2%, UK 9.2%, Japan 9%, Germany 7.1%, Netherlands 4%, , (2004)
Imports: $39.42 billion (f.o.b. 2004 est.)
Imports — commodities: machinery and equipment, chemicals, petroleum products, scientific instruments, foodstuffs (1998 est.)
Imports — partners: US 8.5%, Germany 14.2%, China 7.5%, Japan 6.9%, UK 6.9%, France 6%, Saudi Arabia 5.6%, Iran 5% (2004)
Reserves of foreign exchange and gold: $11.68 billion (2004 est.)
Debt — external: $27.01 billion (2004 est.)
Economic aid — recipient: $487.5 million (2000 est.)
Currency:
rand (ZAR)
Exchange rates: rand per US$: 6.46 (2004 est.), 7.56 (2003 est.), 10.54 (2002 est.), 8.61 (2001 est.), 6.94 (2000 est.)
Fiscal year:
1 April - 31 March
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