Dailymaverick logo

Business Maverick

SONA 2025

Ramaphosa aims for 3% growth, targeting infrastructure investment

In a bid to elevate South Africa's economic pulse from a mere flutter to a robust rhythm, President Ramaphosa has unveiled a R100-billion infrastructure plan and a hefty R20-billion annual boost for the Black Economic Empowerment Transformation Fund, all while promising to keep the lights on—mostly—amid a backdrop of water crises and a burgeoning cannabis industry waiting to go global.
Ramaphosa aims for 3% growth, targeting infrastructure investment President Cyril Ramaphosa arrives for the State of the Nation address at the Cape Town City Hall on 6 February 2025. (Photo: Phando Jikelo / RSA Parliament)

President Cyril Ramaphosa has set a 3% growth target for South Africa which is predicted by economists to grow by between 1.4% and 2% on the upside depending on an infrastructure roll-out.

He has also announced that the Black Economic Empowerment Transformation Fund will be capitalised at R20-billion a year for the next five years, totalling R100-billion over the period.

In his State of the Nation Address, Ramaphosa said South Africa’s infrastructure team wanted to ink deals worth an estimated R100-billion over the medium term. For the first time, public-private partnerships form a substantial part of the package.

His Infrastructure Fund had sealed blended finance packages worth R36-billion last year including for the Polihali Dam (part of the long-delayed next phase of the Lesotho Highlands Water Project), the Mtentu Bridge between Port Edward and Lusikisiki (which will be Africa’s tallest) and the Boegoebaai Harbour in the Northern Cape.

Read more: President Ramaphosa’s 2025 State of the Nation Address

The network sectors of electricity, energy and ports would all be opened to private-sector competition while Eskom and Transnet would be modernised along East Asian models for state-owned companies.

The President praised more than 300 days free of load-shedding, but conceded that last weekend’s power cuts showed the system was still vulnerable.

“This year we will put in place the building blocks of a competitive electricity market,” said Ramaphosa.

The Just Energy Transition plan (funded by countries in the Global North) had $13-billion committed with additional private capital to create this market and to begin to wean South Africa off its old sources of energy. At the same time, Ramaphosa again emphasised that decommissioning coal-fired power stations would happen at a pace and scale that suited South Africa while the country remained committed to its carbon reduction goals. (SA is running behind on these targets.)

Across the country, the business sector has complained that severe water crises are obstructing operations: water management systems are being changed and R23-billion will be spent on seven large water infrastructure projects.

Other than infrastructure, Ramaphosa also highlighted the potential for the cannabis and hemp sectors, which he said South Africa could take to the world. Laws to mass-legalise production and exports are still being finalised. DM

Comments (10)

Grumpy Old Man Feb 7, 2025, 07:52 AM

My concern is far less about 'content' then our ability to convert that content into reality! Implementation depends on people - the right calibre of people with the requisite commitment and skills. It will require a 'magic wand' to effect the kind of clean-out and clean-up necessary!

Arnold O Managra Feb 7, 2025, 08:08 AM

Seems like Swiss bank accounts will be funded to the tune of R100b over the next five years. Quite how this helps the average saffer is entirely unclear ?

keith.ciorovich Feb 7, 2025, 09:54 AM

Same old same old. Year after year most Sona promises are not fulfilled. So why should this years one be any different. The president cannot control his own party and now wants to go toe to toe with America. I think that is not a wise move for the welfare of all South Africans.

Paddy Ross Feb 7, 2025, 10:16 AM

Ramaphosa is right to say that SA will not be bullied. Currently in the US, the inmates are running the asylum. Other nations must come together in the hopes that sanity will prevail.

Malcolm McManus Feb 7, 2025, 10:44 AM

We wont be bullied. We will be ignored. If we were a strong country, as we once were, other countries would take us seriously. You can criticize the US as much as you want to, but ultimately we are the creators of our own destiny. The Liberators messed up bad in many ways. No future with ANC.

keith.ciorovich Feb 8, 2025, 12:14 PM

Please read my comment again, no mention of bullying. If the inmates are running the US then we are in worse trouble than I thought. I am going to purchase a new couch soon. I just hope it is stuffed with dollars.

D'Esprit Dan Feb 7, 2025, 10:20 AM

Instead of taking pride in spending billions on social grants do what you did in the power sector Cyril - cast off the shackles of state control. Unlocking rail, air transport, mining, telecoms etc in the same way will create taxpayers, not tax recipients. Oh, and appoint competent municipal staff.

Trenton Carr Feb 7, 2025, 02:11 PM

Dream on, as long as investment and development is race based, you can forget about 3%.

henk.craucamp Feb 7, 2025, 04:36 PM

Our Prez and his ANC fellowship are a waste of space and valuable oxygen. Poke the US and we will never reach the 3% he so proudly announced. Joke of the day when he gives R100B to race based economy.

Arnold O Managra Feb 7, 2025, 09:44 PM

On another topic, Ferial, I did used to sponsor the DM personally. But only until it became a breeding ground for race bating and silly gender issues. I understand you need clicks, but please realise people who can actually think will respect you accordingly.

Muishond X Feb 8, 2025, 05:51 AM

Pity that Daily Maverick under its woke leadership by Ferial and others is fast losing its relevance. Lack of bias long forgotten. Precursor of whats to come in SA.

matthew@aquacor.co.za Feb 9, 2025, 04:57 PM

Cyril butter-poser

Jeremy Evans Feb 10, 2025, 11:12 AM

If SA wants to increase its economic growth and GDP and give millions of talented young men and women worthwhile employment and careers. It needs to start adding value to its vast mineral resources through manufacturing and exporting these products and services into global markets.

D'Esprit Dan Feb 10, 2025, 11:22 AM

We can't even keep one large steel producer in business, who will suddenly invest in other industrial plants? If you want beneficiation, make it attractive for investors - the red tape, BEE, lousy infrastructure, corruption and lack of state spend on infrastructure are direct disincentives.