
Trump's tariffs put 100 000 jobs at risk in South Africa, Kganyago says
US President Donald Trump's tariffs on South Africa could cause around 100 000 job losses, with the agriculture and automotive sectors hardest-hit, central bank governor Lesetja Kganyago said on Wednesday.
Kganyago told local radio station 702 that the impact of the 30% tariff, which Africa's biggest economy faces from August 1, could cause significant damage to specific industries.
"The impact in agriculture could actually be quite devastating because agriculture employs a lot of low-skilled workers, and here the impact is on citrus fruit, table grapes and wines," Kganyago said.
He said statistics showing South African car exports to the United States slumped more than 80% in the wake of import tariffs imposed on cars by the Trump administration in April were very concerning.
"If we do not find alternative measures the impact on jobs could be around 100 000, so that is what we actually face," the governor said.
South Africa already has one of the highest unemployment rates in the world, with the official rate sitting at 32.9% in the first quarter of this year and an expanded definition at 43.1%.
Farmer groups have also warned of the adverse impact of the tariffs on producers of citrus, macadamia nuts, grapes, wine, fruit juices and ostrich leather.
In the citrus sector alone the tariffs have put 35 000 jobs in jeopardy and threaten to devastate towns such as Citrusdal in the Western Cape that are heavily dependent on exports to the US.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
9 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Canaccord Genuity Initiates 'Buy' on Gold Fields (GFI) with $33 Target
Gold Fields Limited (NYSE:GFI) is one of the best stocks to buy amid gold rally. On July 28, Canaccord Genuity issued a 'Buy' rating as it initiated coverage on Gold Fields; it set the target price at $33. The investment bank cited strong near-term growth prospects for the South Africa-headquartered company. Gold Fields, a top-10 global gold producer operating 10 mines worldwide, is poised for near-term growth driven by expansions at Salares Norte and Gruyere through 2026, alongside ongoing development at Windfall and key assets like St Ives, South Deep, and Tarkwa through 2028. Canaccord Genuity projects notable deleveraging by 2027, which could bolster the company's capacity for M&A and support a re-rating of its shares through rising production, profits, and shareholder returns. Gold Fields Limited (NYSE:GFI) is a globally diversified gold mining company. It explores for, develops, and produces gold, with additional activities in copper and silver extraction. The company operates nine mines across South Africa, Australia, Ghana, Chile, and Peru, and owns the Windfall Project in Québec, Canada. Its primary product is gold bullion, refined from both underground and surface mining operations. While we acknowledge the potential of GFI as an investment, we believe certain AI stocks offer greater upside potential and carry less downside risk. If you're looking for an extremely undervalued AI stock that also stands to benefit significantly from Trump-era tariffs and the onshoring trend, see our free report on the best short-term AI stock. READ NEXT: and . Disclosure: None. This article is originally published at Insider Monkey.


Forbes
11 minutes ago
- Forbes
Bitcoin Is Suddenly On The Brink As $300 Billion Crypto Shock Sparks Price Crash Fears
Bitcoin, one of the year's best performing assets, has fallen sharply, plunging almost 10% as traders brace for a huge price game-changer. Sign up now for CryptoCodex—A free newsletter for the crypto-curious The bitcoin price hit an all-time high of $123,000 per bitcoin in July, riding a wave of optimism stoked by president Donald Trump's White House, Wall Street giants, and dozens of bitcoin treasury companies—with some predicting an imminent $50 trillion earthquake. Now, as fears of collapse and a Federal Reserve crisis hit the U.S. dollar, bitcoin traders are scrambling to get ahead of what could be a major market crash. Sign up now for the free CryptoCodex—A daily five-minute newsletter for traders, investors and the crypto-curious that will get you up to date and keep you ahead of the bitcoin and crypto market bull run 'We may be on the brink of another 1929 crash and another Great Depression,' investment guru and Rich Dad, Poor Dad author Robert Kiyosaki posted to X this week, pointing to investment legends including Warren Buffet and Jim Rogers who have sold many of their investments. 'I sit tight with gold, silver, and bitcoin,' Kiyosaki added. However, the bitcoin price fell this week following the latest round of U.S. trade tariffs, plummeting along with stock markets as the U.S. economy added far few jobs than expected in July and earlier months were massively revised down. 'There's a lot of risk in bitcoin,' gold bug Peter Schiff, the chief economist at Euro Pacific Asset Management and an outspoken bitcoin critic, said during an X Spaces broadcast. 'Days like today make it clear that bitcoin is not digital gold," Schiff added in an X post. "We got bad economic news that sent gold and the Japanese yen up 2.2% and the euro up 1.5%. The Nasdaq went the other way, falling 2.2%. Bitcoin tanked 3%, tracking high-risk assets lower, not safe havens higher.' Bitcoin has rocketed around 650% since it dropped to lows of $16,000 per bitcoin in late 2022, with half of those gains coming in just the last year. 'Bitcoin has given up almost half of its gains from the lows at the start of the month to the peaks on 14 July," Alex Kuptsikevich, FxPro chief market analyst, said in emailed comments. "Heavy selling in the second half of the month is darkening the clouds, but it will take more than just fatigue and a lack of news to reverse the trend. Last month and August 2024 also saw a weak start, so this comes as no surprise.' Sign up now for CryptoCodex—A free newsletter for the crypto-curious August has historically been a losing month for the bitcoin price, which could weigh on the market. 'In terms of seasonality, August is considered one of the two most unfavourable months for bitcoin," Kuptsikevich said. "Over the past 14 years, bitcoin has ended the month with growth only five times and has declined nine times. For the last three years, bitcoin has been unsuccessful.' However, bitcoin and crypto holders are upbeat following some of the biggest ever developments for crypto on Wall Street and in the Trump White House. 'Bitcoin's consolidation after a period of successive all-time highs comes as no surprise. Yet again, inflationary fears have risen as tariffs and geopolitical uncertainty linger, spooking both crypto and traditional markets,' Gadi Chait, head of investment at Xapo Bank, said in emailed comments. 'Still, in the week that the White House crypto report set a precedent for the growth of the crypto industry, the bigger picture for bitcoin remains hopeful. This extraordinary endorsement from the highest levels of government underscores just how mainstream bitcoin has become." Chait also pointed to bitcoin exchange-traded fund (ETF) flows, which have 'served as a key barometer of institutional sentiment, with outflows of $114.69 million recorded on July 31 signalling tactical de-risking' ahead of Trump's August 1 tariff deadline. 'In recent times, bitcoin has proven its ability to weather turbulence inflicted by external factors, an encouraging sign of its increasing maturity," Chait said. 'Our conviction in bitcoin's long-term potential still stands, undeterred by short-term price fluctuations.'
Yahoo
19 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Charting the Global Economy: US Job Market Wavers in Cue for Fed
(Bloomberg) -- The US labor market is wavering after a slowdown in economic growth during the first half of the year — implications of heightened uncertainty tied to trade policy. The World's Data Center Capital Has Residents Surrounded An Abandoned Art-Deco Landmark in Buffalo Awaits Revival We Should All Be Biking Along the Beach San Francisco in Talks With Vanderbilt for Downtown Campus Seeking Relief From Heat and Smog, Cities Follow the Wind President Donald Trump unveiled a slew of new tariffs that boosted the average US rate on goods from across the world, forging ahead with his effort to reshape international commerce and bolster American manufacturing. The baseline rates for many trading partners remain unchanged at 10% from the duties Trump imposed in April. Signs of a sluggish job market and the risk of a reacceleration in inflation due to higher import duties are dueling forces dividing Federal Reserve officials over the path of interest rates. In the wake of a weak jobs report on Friday, Treasury yields declined on bets the Fed will lower interest rates as soon as September after keeping them unchanged this week. In Canada, central bankers left interest rates unchanged, while keeping the door open to more cuts if the economy weakens and inflation pressures stay in check. The Bank of Japan also held the line on borrowing costs. Here are some of the charts that appeared on Bloomberg this week on the latest developments in the global economy, markets and geopolitics: US Job growth slowed sharply over the past three months and the unemployment rate rose in July, showing the labor market is shifting into a lower gear amid widespread economic uncertainty. Not only is job growth cooling markedly and unemployment rising, it's harder for unemployed Americans to get a job and wage gains have largely stalled. That poses further risks to a slowdown in consumer and business spending that's already underway. Economic growth moderated through the first half of the year as consumers tempered their spending after a late-2024 splurge and companies adjusted to frequently shifting trade policy. While gross domestic product increased at a solid 3% annual rate, final sales to private domestic purchasers, a narrower metric of demand, rose at the slowest since the end of 2022. Factory activity contracted in July at the fastest pace in nine months, dragged down by a faster decline in employment as orders continued to shrink. A measure of employment slid to the lowest level in more than five years, suggesting producers are stepping up efforts to control costs amid higher tariffs and softer demand. Europe The euro-area economy unexpectedly eked out growth in the second quarter, benefiting from better-than-predicted performances in France and Spain. Gross domestic product increased 0.1%. While the results suggest some resilience in the 20-nation bloc at a time of heightened uncertainty, they mask economic contractions in Germany and Italy, the region's biggest and third-largest members. As European Union leaders work through the consequences of their new trading arrangement with the US, they are confronting the bitter reality of just how far they have fallen. Even with the unpalatable terms, the EU may struggle to deliver on its new commitments to the US. Asia Bank of Japan Governor Kazuo Ueda kept investors guessing over the timing of his next interest rate hike with comments that cooled expectations of a near-term move and weakened the yen. The BOJ kept the overnight call rate at 0.5% at the end of a two-day policy meeting in a widely expected unanimous vote. China's top leadership emphasized its determination to reduce excess competition in the economy, with President Xi Jinping endorsing a campaign targeting one major cause of deflation and tensions with trade partners. Trump said Thursday he would impose a 25% tariff on India's exports, before following through a day later, and threatened an additional penalty over the country's energy purchases from Russia. India is weighing options to placate the White House, including boosting US imports, and has ruled out immediate retaliation, according to people familiar with the matter. Emerging Markets The global trade war that Trump unleashed from the Rose Garden that afternoon shook investor confidence in the US economy so much that it sparked a stampede out of the dollar. Much of that money has flowed into other developed countries but billions have washed up in developing nations, reviving a market that for more than a decade had been relegated to a mere afterthought in investing circles. Chile's economic activity unexpectedly fell for the second month in June as a plunge in mining offset gains across other sectors in one of Latin America's richest nations. Mexico's quarterly economic growth came in higher than expected in the three months through June as manufacturing and services powered Latin America's second-largest economy despite US tariffs. World At an average of 15%, the world is still facing some of the steepest US tariffs since the 1930s, roughly six times higher than they were a year ago. Trump's latest volley outlined minimum 10% baseline levies, with rates of 15% or more for countries with trade surpluses with the US. The months of negotiations, marked by Trump's social-media threats against US allies and foes alike, ended with new rates that were largely in line or lower than those on April 2. The world economy will keep weakening and remains vulnerable to trade shocks even though it is showing some resilience to Trump's tariffs, the International Monetary Fund said. Its updated projections are slightly better than those in April, but largely reflect distortions such as front-loading in anticipation of tariffs. In addition to the US, Canada and Japan, central bankers in Pakistan, Georgia, Singapore, Brazil, Colombia, Dominican Republic, Malawi and Eswatisi held interest rates steady. Chile, South Africa and Mozambique cut rates. Ghana lowered borrowing costs by the most on record. --With assistance from Nazmul Ahasan, Vinícius Andrade, Maya Averbuch, Ruchi Bhatia, Matthew Burgess, Katia Dmitrieva, Toru Fujioka, Selcuk Gokoluk, Philip J. Heijmans, William Horobin, John Liu, Yujing Liu, Matthew Malinowski, Mark Niquette, Swati Pandey, Jana Randow, Augusta Saraiva, Zoe Schneeweiss, Shruti Srivastava, Jorge Valero and Fran Wang. How Podcast-Obsessed Tech Investors Made a New Media Industry Everyone Loves to Hate Wind Power. Scotland Found a Way to Make It Pay Off It's Not Just Tokyo and Kyoto: Tourists Descend on Rural Japan Russia Builds a New Web Around Kremlin's Handpicked Super App Cage-Free Eggs Are Booming in the US, Despite Cost and Trump's Efforts ©2025 Bloomberg L.P.