Abstract

Background: South Africa has not fully recovered from the 2008 global recession. The World Bank has predicted that South Africa will be one of the worst performers in sub-Saharan Africa in 2020 with tepid growth of 1.3% which is far below the National Development Plan targets growth of 5.4% required a year to reduce unemployment, create decent jobs and generate enough revenue for social development. Aim: We aim to examine whether changes in the components of final demand (changes in government spending, household consumption expenditure, exports, investment spending) have a considerable effect on the sector's gross value added, job creation and tax revenue generation and whether there were changes in the exogenous final demand in die post-recession period. Setting: We focus on building supply and use tables based on 62 different sectors of the South African economy. Methods: An economy-wide Leontief multiplier-based model calibrated on a supply and use framework and a micro-simulation model is used to assess post-recession trends in macroeconomic, labour and fiscal multipliers for South Africa. Results: The simulations show that during the post-recession era, the effect of exogenous shock in the economy, like an increase in investment spending, although positive, yields a smaller return in terms of tax revenue, job creation and economic growth. At sector level, the results show that the inter-industry links and industry-consumer links have therefore weakened. Conclusion: Our findings imply that the persisting low growth trajectory associated with weaker inter-industry linkages could be exacerbated, while the fiscal austerity measures associated with weaker forward and backword tax linkages could be prolonged. We recommend government should follow a priorities-based spending policy that yields optimal socioeconomic returns.

Highlights

  • Micro-simulations of dynamic supply and use tables (SUT) are a powerful tool for analysing the dynamic effects of fiscal policy on the macroeconomy

  • And use tables provide a record of economic data in a matrix forma­ t, which shows how supplies of different kind of goods and services originate from domestic industries and imports, and how these supplies are allocated between various intermediate in­ puts and final demand, including exports

  • Not a single study using SUT Leontief multipliers has examined the effect of taxes or fiscal poli­cy on the South African economy

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Summary

Background

South Africa has not fully recovered from the 2008 global recession. The World Bank has predicted that South Africa will be one of the worst performers in sub-Saharan Africa in 2020 with tepid growth of 1.3% which is far below the National Development Plan targets growth of 5.4% required a year to reduce unemployment, create decent jobs and generate enough revenue for social development. Aim: We aim to examine whether changes in the components of final demand (changes in government spending, household consumption expenditure, exports, investment spending) have a considerable effect on the sector’s gross value added, job creation and tax revenue generation and whether there were changes in the exogenous final demand in die postrecession period. Setting: We focus on building supply and use tables based on 62 different sectors of the South African economy

Results
Conclusion
Introduction
42. EPWP – Youth
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