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South Africa Faces Economic Strain As 482 Businesses Close In Four Months - Politics - Nairaland b6x6u

South Africa Faces Economic Strain As 482 Businesses Close In Four Months (7704 Views)

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Ironfaceman(m): 9:07am On Jun 03
South Africa recorded 109 business liquidations in April 2025, bringing the total number of closures this year to 482 during the first four months in 2025, according to Statistics South Africa (Stats SA).


South Africa is facing a continued rise in business closures, with over 100 companies liquidated in April 2024 marking a 13.2% increase compared to the same period last year, highlighting ongoing challenges for the country’s business environment.

The data shows that voluntary liquidations where business owners decide to close their companies increased by 25.7% year-on-year.

Conversely, compulsory liquidations initiated by creditors due to unpaid debts declined by 29.4%. This shift suggests that more entrepreneurs are choosing to close down operations proactively amid economic difficulties.

Businesses across the country are struggling with a combination of financial and operational pressures.

High interest rates are making borrowing more expensive, while weak consumer demand has reduced revenue streams. These challenges make it difficult for many businesses to remain viable.

Rising operational costs and energy insecurity
Energy supply issues, particularly frequent power outages known as load shedding, continue to disrupt business operations. Companies are forced to use expensive alternatives like generators, which drive up costs.
In addition, logistical hurdles and increasing transport expenses further strain resources, especially for small and medium-sized enterprises.

These compounding factors have contributed to the increased wave of liquidations. The Small Business Institute has noted that the data reflects a worsening business climate, where many companies cannot sustain operations under current economic pressures.

THE TRUMP FACTOR

BusinessTech attributes South Africa’s increasingly difficult business climate to mounting external and internal pressures, including the launch of U.S. President Donald Trump’s global tariff war and growing tensions within the Government of National Unity (GNU) over the 2025 budget.

Trump imposed a sweeping 10% global tariff on 5 April, followed by a harsher set of “reciprocal” tariffs targeting select countries including South Africa.
Branded the “Liberation Day” tariff, the latter measure was temporarily paused for 90 days.

Washington's trade war with South Africa, following the nation's land reform laws that allegedly targeted white farmers, further strained relations between the two countries.

Trump's aggressive trade posture triggered significant global uncertainty, disrupting markets and prompting many South African businesses to halt investment and development plans as they adopted a cautious, wait-and-see approach.

As South Africa moves through 2025, the growing number of business liquidations serves as a stark reminder of the need for stronger economic interventions to protect small and medium-sized enterprises, the backbone of the economy, and to foster recovery and growth.


https://africa.businessinsider.com/local/markets/south-africa-faces-economic-strain-as-482-businesses-close-in-four-months/m9qtev8

1 Like

Ironfaceman(m): 9:09am On Jun 03
I hope BRICS is not screwing them over.

5 Likes

Watianoengineer(m): 9:43am On Jun 03
This is why we should thank president Bola Tinubu for his bold reforms. South Africans are enjoying subsidy but businesses are closing down. No more subsidy in nigeria and the economy is growing rapidly. May God bless president Bola Tinubu and give him strength to fulfill his renewed hope agenda. Amen

67 Likes 8 Shares

majekobaje1: 9:43am On Jun 03
Y
crossfm: 9:44am On Jun 03
Hehehe.

APC boys food don land o grin cheesy.

They will so use this news to defend their masters failure grin cheesy.

They love using negative news from other countries to do comparison,but ask them to use the positive news and see them giving you excuses grin cheesy.

34 Likes 9 Shares

AngelicBeing: 9:44am On Jun 03
sad
osuofia2(m): 9:45am On Jun 03
The White are the back bone of SA, Zimbabwe is a case study

31 Likes

fmlala: 9:45am On Jun 03
That is South Africa, Some people wish it was Nigeria so they can have something to fist on.



God bless Nigeria!


Nigeria will move forward!!

31 Likes 6 Shares

Emmy000seun(m): 9:46am On Jun 03
Make people no come dey compare this to Nigeria situation ooo,... because our case is different..😂😂..na politicians scammers no let us enjoy 4 our naija...
Ironfaceman:



https://africa.businessinsider.com/local/markets/south-africa-faces-economic-strain-as-482-businesses-close-in-four-months/m9qtev8



4 Likes 3 Shares

Orissodiq: 9:46am On Jun 03
Na because of white /black conflict.
U don't know d number of white South African that have relocated to USA within last year and now? Directly or indirectly dia business will close and lead to unemployment

19 Likes 3 Shares

ideatoprince18(m): 9:46am On Jun 03
Okay
ideatoprince18(m): 9:46am On Jun 03
Watianoengineer:
This is why we should thank president Bola Tinubu for his bold reforms. South Africans are enjoying subsidy but businesses are closing down. No more subsidy in nigeria and the economy is growing rapidly. May God bless president Bola Tinubu and give him strength to fulfill his renewed hope agenda. Amen
Don't be silly

34 Likes 7 Shares

anonimi: 9:47am On Jun 03
Watianoengineer:
This is why we should thank president Bola Tinubu for his bold reforms. South Africans are enjoying subsidy but businesses are closing down. No more subsidy in nigeria and the economy is growing rapidly. May God bless president Bola Tinubu and give him strength to fulfill his renewed hope agenda. Amen

Is this what ebilokan promised before he was given the job of president

Majesty2:
The APC Presidential candidate, Asiwaju Bola Ahmed Tinubu, has revealed how he will drive the economy of the country, strengthen the Naira and making the country "import less" while "exporting more".




https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kCskn6CbuqA

68 Likes 5 Shares

WorldRichest: 9:47am On Jun 03
crossfm:
Hehehe.

APC boys food don land o grin cheesy.

They will so use this news to defend their masters failure grin cheesy.

They love using negative news from other countries to do comperism,but ask them to use the positive news and see them giving you excuses grin cheesy.


LP and PDP binary well done

16 Likes 1 Share

fredoooooo: 9:48am On Jun 03
Who cares
neonly: 9:48am On Jun 03
I knew dis was going to happen it was just a matter of time
D whole world doesn't want Africa to grow
But SA over do der wahala
BeginsAtHome(f): 9:48am On Jun 03
God help the 🌈 nation for Mandela's sake
anonimi: 9:50am On Jun 03
fmlala:
That is South Africa, Some people wish it was Nigeria so they can have something to fist on.

God bless Nigeria!

Nigeria will move forward!!

We are moving forward already with more luxuries for ebilokan and co, squeezed out of us in subsidy savings, increased taxes etc.

chisomkachy:
Nigerian President Bola Tinubu’s first supplementary budget includes a fleet of SUVs for himself and his wife, a presidential yacht and the renovation of his villa amid a cost-of-living crisis for some of the poorest people in the world.

The proposal — which seeks additional funding beyond the annual budget approved by Tinubu’s predecessor — comes as the government asks Nigerians to persevere through pain caused in part by a raft of economic reforms ushered in by the new president. Africa’s most populous country faces rampant unemployment, soaring food prices and a plummeting currency.

Federal lawmakers approved the president’s request for extra spending on Thursday, but eliminated the provision of 5 billion naira ($6.01 million) to buy a presidential yacht. Instead, they doubled the allocation to a student loan fund to 10 billion naira, according Abubakar Bichi, chairman of an appropriations committee in the House of Representatives.

The lawmakers approved 1.5 billion-naira proposed to purchase SUVs for the office of First Lady Oluremi Tinubu — an amount larger than that allocated to many individual federal colleges. The supplementary budget also proposes almost 6 billion naira to purchase SUVs for the presidency — more than the amount initially allocated to fund a student loan program for poor families.


https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2023-11-02/nigeria-budgets-for-suvs-and-yachts-amid-economic-hardship

59 Likes 4 Shares

Goodnewsforlife: 9:50am On Jun 03
crossfm:
Hehehe.

APC boys food don land o grin cheesy.

They will so use this news to defend their masters failure grin cheesy.

They love using negative news from other countries to do comparison,but ask them to use the positive news and see them giving you excuses grin cheesy.



u people are just pained cos we reject your failure

Go n check statistics of economic growth rate of president's since 99 n u will see Tinubu performed well

14 Likes 2 Shares

olaolaking: 9:50am On Jun 03
Tinubu sef - Emeka.

But Ipob representatives say It can only happen in Nigeria now.

5 Likes 1 Share

blingxx(m): 9:51am On Jun 03
neonly:
I knew dis was going to happen it was just a matter of time
D whole world doesn't want Africa to grow
But SA over do der wahala

Their greatest mistake is being racist to other Africans and their masters are leaving

2 Likes

DeltaBachelor(m): 9:54am On Jun 03
Hmmmm
AuthegaPRIMUS(m): 9:55am On Jun 03
Summary 😒🙂


South Africa recorded 109 business liquidations in April 2025, bringing the year-to-date total to 482 for the first four months, according to Statistics South Africa. This represents a 13.2% year-on-year increase in April closures.

The data reveals a significant shift: voluntary liquidations (owner-initiated closures) surged by 25.7% year-on-year, while compulsory liquidations (creditor-forced) decreased by 29.4%. This indicates more entrepreneurs are proactively shutting down amidst severe economic pressures.

Businesses face compounding challenges:
High interest rates increasing borrowing costs.
Weak consumer demand reducing revenue.
Rising operational costs, exacerbated by persistent energy insecurity ("load shedding"wink forcing expensive alternatives like generators.
Logistical hurdles and transport cost increases.

External pressures intensified the situation:
The launch of former US President Trump's global tariff war, including a 10% global tariff and paused "Liberation Day" tariffs targeting South Africa following land reform disputes.
Growing tensions within South Africa's Government of National Unity over the 2025 budget.

This combination created significant uncertainty, causing many businesses to halt investment and adopt a "wait-and-see" approach. The Small Business Institute warns the data reflects a worsening climate where sustaining operations is increasingly difficult. The rising liquidation trend underscores an urgent need for stronger economic interventions to SMEs, vital for recovery and growth.
FitCorper: 9:57am On Jun 03
When Tinubu saw past these and implemented tough decisions to safeguard Nigerian ignorant people were swearing and cussing.

6 Likes

Successsearch90(m): 10:03am On Jun 03
Not only in Nigeria sha.
It's everywhere

3 Likes

LabStores: 10:03am On Jun 03
It's global

3 Likes

Toosure70: 10:05am On Jun 03
And so, na normal things nau

1 Like

free2ryhme: 10:07am On Jun 03
Ppogbae: 10:07am On Jun 03
Ramaphosa should've taken a more assertive stance against Trump's false allegations of white genocide. Surely, that kind rhetoric feeds into the trope of an unsafe, violence infested South Africa and is scaring investors.

5 Likes

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Nigerian President’s Luck Runs Out On Fuel Gamble -Financial Times

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