Lesotho’s economy catches flu from SA’s sneeze - Articles:
Posted on Tuesday 24 January 2012 - 11:30
By Masimba Tafirenyika for Africa Renewal
Lesotho's economy is inextricably linked to that of its giant neighbour, South Africa. As South Africa's economic difficulties threaten to drag Lesotho down the drain, the tiny landlocked kingdom is now looking at other avenues to stay afloat. For decades the mountain kingdom of Lesotho has relied heavily on South Africa to advance - until now.
lesotho_tradition
South Africa’s economic difficulties are placing Lesotho’s economy at a crossroads, as the government struggles to push big rocks up the mountain to balance the national budget.
South Africa employs thousands of Basothos (nationals of Lesotho) as migrant labour, buys water from a project that in turn generates enough electricity to meet Lesotho’s needs and generously shares revenue from a customs union that contributes significantly to the tiny kingdom’s budget. Moreover, South African companies are active in other sectors, including retail trade, insurance and banking.
Now the economic outlook is shifting, despite modest gains over the  years Lesotho remains one of the world’s poorest countries. The 2011/12  budget was “the most difficult the government had to put together,”  reckons Finance Minister Timothy Thahane. His worries include a slowdown  in economic growth, rising unemployment and diminishing revenues from  migrant workers who are losing jobs in South Africa. Lesotho also faces  declining agricultural production, falling life expectancy and high HIV  infection rates.
In addition, Lesotho is wrestling with a 30 per  cent decline in domestic revenues and a 15 per cent budget deficit in  the 2011/12 financial year. The government expects to fund the gap with  loans from international financial institutions and foreign aid.
A  steep decline in last year’s takings from the Southern African Customs  Union (SACU) punched the biggest hole in the budget. SACU, the oldest  customs union in the world (it recently celebrated its hundredth  anniversary), maintains free trade among members — South Africa,  Botswana, Lesotho, Swaziland and Namibia — and charges non-members a  common tariff. Revenues are shared from a common pool run by South  Africa under an agreed-upon formula. Since 1969, SACU receipts have been  contributing more than half of Lesotho’s budget revenues.
“As a  country, we were overly aware that about 60 per cent of the  government’s budget is funded by SACU,” Central Bank Governor  Retselisitsoe Matlanyane told a local magazine, Visions, in early 2011.  Thanks to the recent global financial meltdown, trade among SACU members  has fallen considerably, cutting by half Lesotho’s customs receipts.
Worse  still, dwindling remittances from migrant workers in South Africa have  dealt another blow. The World Bank’s Migration and Remittances Factbook  2011 shows that out of Lesotho’s 2.1 million people, about 457,500 were  living outside the country in 2010. As the largest source of foreign  exchange, remittances contribute an estimated US$525 million or 30 per  cent of Lesotho’s GDP in 2010, says the report.
Despite the  upsurge in global mineral prices, there has been a mild recession in  South Africa over the past few years. That in turn has had an impact on  Lesotho by forcing employers, especially mining companies, to retrench  thousands, including Basotho migrants — thereby cutting the remittances  they send back home.
The textiles industry too has taken a  beating. Low demand for garments in the US has shrunk earnings and  contributed to the red ink in the budget. Under a US law, the African  Growth and Opportunity Act (AGOA), Lesotho has emerged as one of  sub-Saharan Africa’s largest garments exporters to the US. AGOA allows  qualifying African countries to sell textiles duty-free to the US. Yet a  strong South African rand — to which Lesotho’s national currency, the  loti, is pegged — has hurt the competitiveness of Lesotho’s second  largest employer.
The picture from agriculture is even less  reassuring. Three in four Basothos eke out a living from subsistence  farming. But the contribution of grain harvests to the GDP has dropped  from 4.8 per cent in 2000 to 1.8 per cent in 2010, says Mr. Thahane. The  UN has warned that crop production “is declining and could cease  altogether over large tracts of the country if steps are not taken to  reverse soil erosion, degradation, and the decline in soil fertility.”
Despite  the economic hardships, Lesotho has until now done better than its  neighbours - Swaziland and Zimbabwe. There are a few silver linings that  could change fortunes. To its credit, the government now realizes the  hazards of relying too much on traditional sources of revenue.
In  his budget speech, the finance minister unveiled new policies to revive  agriculture, diversify export products and markets and attract  investors by relaxing foreign investment laws. Still, such policies can  bring relief only if the economies of the country’s key trading partners  — the US, European Union and South Africa — recover.
Water is  Lesotho’s “white gold,” as Basothos fondly call it. Income from the sale  of water from the Lesotho Highlands Water Project is expected to  increase with the construction of Metolong Dam and its spin-offs. Under  the water project, created in partnership with South Africa, Lesotho  exports water to its neighbour’s Gauteng province through a series of  dams and tunnels blasted through the mountains. Gauteng, the hub of  South Africa’s economy, has little water of its own and therefore needs  Lesotho to quench its thirst. As a double benefit, the  multi-billion-dollar project also generates enough hydroelectric power  to meet about 90 per cent of Lesotho’s energy needs.
Lesotho  could also count on a decent windfall from mining exports as global  mineral prices go up. Income from diamonds, while still negligible, is  growing. The government plans to generate additional funds by cutting  and polishing the diamonds at home. Lesotho has shown renewed interest  in attracting investors. The World Bank’s 2011 Doing Business report,  which ranks countries’ business-friendly policies, grades Lesotho at a  dismal 138 out of 183 countries. If it relaxes business restrictions,  the government could easily lure investors into the mining, textile and  retail industries.
Nevertheless, huge challenges lie ahead,  including the likelihood of another global recession, which could upset  many of Lesotho’s well-crafted economic plans. For now, the tiny  mountain kingdom appears to have grasped the perils of unbridled  reliance on South Africa’s magnanimity.
No comments:
Post a Comment