Moody's
downgrades South Africa, fears for stability
Moody's
is downgrading South Africa's bond rating to a negative Baa1 from A3
citing concerns for political stability amid labor unrest and
socio-economic stresses.
28
September, 2012
Moody's
said an important factor is its decision Thursday to downgrade the
country's institutional strength from high to moderate, reflecting a
diminished capacity to handle political and economic problems.
Analyst
Peter Attard Montalto of NOMURA International in London said the
downgrade comes much earlier than expected. He predicted further
downgrades from other agencies as strikes spread to other mines and
other sectors.
Moody's
cited uncertainty about policy decisions ahead of a December ruling
party congress that will decide if President Jacob Zuma gets a second
term to preside over Africa's largest economy.
It
said recent strikes highlighted high unemployment and wide disparity
between rich and poor.
Strikes
hammer South Africa's mining industry
Trouble
in South Africa's mining sector has paralyzed the world's biggest
producer of platinum and other companies in an industrial
confrontation that's likely to get worse.
UPI,
28
September, 2012
Trouble
in South Africa's mining sector has paralyzed Anglo American
Platinum, the world's biggest producer of the precious metal, and
other companies in a swelling industrial confrontation that's likely
to get worse.
The
unrest, in which 45 people have been killed, 32 of them shot by
police, is threatening Africa's largest and most developed economy
amid a political dogfight that could dash President Jacob Zuma's
prospects of securing a second term.
Zuma,
who heads the ruling African National Congress, has estimated the
mine shutdowns have cost South Africa $924 million in lost
production. The mining sector accounts for one-fifth of South
Africa's gross domestic product, and generates more than half the
country's exports.
The
country supplies 80 percent of the world's platinum, one-quarter of
its chrome and is among the top 10 gold producers.
AngloGold
Ashanti, one of the world's major bullion producers, was also hit as
the wave of strikes that began Aug. 10 proliferated across a nation
that since 1994 has been seen as the trailblazer for democracy and
economic progress for the African continent.
The
Financial Times observed that the unrest that started at the Marikana
platinum mine near Johannesburg run by major producer Lonmin has
"exposed frustrations over poverty in one of the world's most
unequal societies, as well as fraught labor relations as more workers
become dissatisfied with their traditional unions and the ANC-led
government."
A
wage-hike settlement Sept. 18 by Lonmin that was supposed to end the
violent 5-week walkout at Marikana, during which the killings
occurred, initially raised hopes the unrest would die down.
But
walkouts by tens of thousands of workers demanding higher wages have
spread even wider since then, largely because of growing discontent
with Zuma and the ANC, the party that led South Africa out of the era
of white minority rule in nearly two decades ago.
Indeed,
all the signs are that a major political showdown between the
flamboyant Zuma, an ethnic Zulu and wily political operator who
dominates the faction-ridden ANC, is shaping up as he maneuvers for a
second five-year term.
When
the ANC came to power in 1994 on a wave of black empowerment after
decades of repressive white minority rule, it pledged millions of
jobs, an end to poverty and institutional racism, plus new housing,
schools, hospitals and freedoms denied the black majority during
apartheid.
The
reality has been very different and anger amid the recent tumult of
strikes, and the killings they triggered, have emphasized the growing
disparity between rich and poor, with Zuma and the black political
elite joining the rich.
Some
40 percent of the 50 million population lives below the poverty line
of $50 a month.
Youth
unemployment, pegged at around 50 percent, is seen as a time bomb
waiting to explode -- as it might if the current upheaval drags on.
Zuma's
popularity has plummeted as he's been caught up in political and
financial scandals and now faces a major challenge from former ANC
youth leader Julius Malena.
He
was expelled from the party supposedly for disciplinary reasons in
February, although his feud with Zuma was probably a major factor.
In
recent weeks, Malena, a longtime advocate of nationalizing the mining
industry, urged strikers to make the mines "ungovernable."
Malena,
31, was arrested a week ago on charges of corruption, apparently
following a lengthy investigation by a shadowy elite police unit
known as "the Hawks."
He
claimed his arrest was politically motivated, ordered by Zuma to
silence him before the ANC's party congress in December where the
president's political fate will be decided.
If
Zuma retains leadership of the party he's a shoo-in to be returned as
state president in elections due in 2014.
But
he faces a serious challenge within the ANC, primarily from senior
figures who are tribal opponents led by the party's deputy president,
Kgalema Motlanthe.
The
mining sector, the Congress of South African Trade Unions and the
ANC-led government "will bring an end to the mining strike to
quell the controversy and eliminate the cost to the South African
economy," observed the U.S. security consultancy Stratfor.
"But
this resolution will not address the more fundamental stresses on the
economy that any government in Pretoria will be hard-pressed to
resolve."
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