South Africa's 2025 GDP growth reaches 1.1%, below expectations amid mixed sectors

Following late-2025 reports of economic promise and investor optimism based on preliminary data, South Africa's gross domestic product expanded by just 1.1% for the full year of 2025—up from 0.5% in 2024 but below the Treasury's 1.4% estimate. Quarterly growth hit 0.4% in Q4 after a revised 0.3% in Q3. Industrial sectors like mining and manufacturing contracted, offset by gains in finance and investment.

South Africa's economy recorded a 1.1% growth rate for 2025, according to Stats SA data released on 10 March 2026. This improves on 2024's 0.5% but misses the 1.4% forecast from Finance Minister Enoch Godongwana's recent budget. The figure tempers earlier optimism from late 2025, when preliminary data suggested stronger momentum, and could pressure debt projections at 78.9% of GDP.

Quarterly, GDP grew 0.4% in Q4 2025, after Q3's downwardly revised 0.3% (originally 0.5%). Sectors were mixed: mining fell 0.6% in Q4 (from Q3's 2.4% gain), manufacturing shrank 0.6% (from 0.2%), and construction dropped 1.3%.

Positively, finance grew 1.4%, agriculture 0.4% in Q4 (17.4% yearly despite disease outbreaks), and fixed capital formation rose 1.3% (after Q3's 1.4%, ending prior declines)—echoing early signs of investment recovery noted previously.

Jee-A van der Linde of Oxford Economics Africa said: “On balance, industry weighed on growth, while household consumption provided support, with somewhat encouraging signs coming from fixed investment.” George Glynos of ETM Analytics added: “We haven’t even started the new fiscal year, and the growth forecasts already seem to be disappointing expectations. That doesn’t even include the impact of the Iran war... Not a great start for a government that wants to target another credit upgrade.”

Challenges persist: regulations, policy inertia, skills shortages, ineffective plans, crime, and corruption—impeding growth to tackle unemployment and poverty.

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Seoul skyline billboard announcing 1.7% GDP surge in Q1 2026, with port exports and celebrating executives, illustrating South Korea's economic growth.
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South Korea GDP surges 1.7% in Q1 2026, fastest pace in over 5 years

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South Korea's real GDP jumped 1.7 percent in Q1 2026 from the prior quarter—the strongest growth in 5½ years—despite Middle East tensions, easily topping the Bank of Korea's 0.9 percent forecast on robust exports and steady domestic demand. Part of the rebound following 2025's modest 1% annual expansion (see prior article in series).

Nigeria's Gross Domestic Product expanded by 4.07% year-on-year in real terms during the fourth quarter of 2025, according to the National Bureau of Statistics.

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Brazil's Gross Domestic Product (GDP) expanded 2.3% in 2025, below the 3.4% of 2024, according to data released by the IBGE on Tuesday (3). The economy did not grow in the second half, with family consumption stagnant and productive investment declining, but government spending and exports prevented contraction. The slowdown stems from tighter monetary policy to control inflation.

Hong Kong's economy expanded 5.9% year-on-year in Q1 2026, its fastest quarterly growth in nearly five years and surpassing Financial Secretary Paul Chan's forecast of over 4%. Driven by private consumption and government spending despite Middle East tensions, the advance estimate from the Census and Statistics Department exceeded the 4% rise in Q4 2025. A government spokesman highlighted a positive outlook but noted regional risks.

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Indonesia's economy grew 5.61 percent in Q1 2026, the highest in five years and among G20 nations releasing data, according to BPS. Kadin, officials, and the Finance Minister praised the achievement amid global challenges. Growth was driven by household consumption, government spending, and investment.

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