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South Africa secures breakthrough G20 consensus as global economic uncertainty mounts

South Africa secures breakthrough G20 consensus as global economic uncertainty mounts

South Africa secured a rare consensus among G20 finance ministers and central bank governors, concluding a two-day meeting with a joint communique, the first since October 2024.
South Africa achieved a rare consensus among G20 ministers, culminating in a jointly issued communique.
The agreement was made notwithstanding the absence of key delegates and addressed significant global economic challenges.
Financial markets in South Africa, including the rand and stock indices, positively responded to the announcement.
The agreement, reached despite the absence of the U.S. Treasury Secretary, came as investors responded positively to the outcome, boosting South African assets.
Held in Durban under South Africa's presidency, the meeting concluded on Friday with a statement addressing macroeconomic challenges, central bank independence, and multilateral cooperation.
The communique comes at a time of heightened uncertainty in the global economy, amid ongoing conflicts, trade tensions, and extreme weather events.
G20 backs joint communique in diplomatic win for South Africa
The market reaction was immediate. The rand rose roughly 0.6% to trade at 17.7050 against the U.S. dollar.
The Johannesburg Stock Exchange's Top-40 index climbed 1.5%, while the broader All-Share index gained 1.4%, nearing an all-time high. The rally was largely driven by mining stocks, with Gold Fields up 2%, Harmony Gold up 1%, and Sibanye Stillwater rising by 4%.
South Africa's benchmark 2035 government bond also advanced, with the yield easing 1.5 basis points to 9.945%.
The communique was adopted under the presidency theme 'Solidarity, Equality, Sustainability.' In previous G20 meetings where consensus could not be achieved, only a summary or chair's statement was issued.
This time, all members agreed on the final statement. South Africa's Deputy Finance Minister David Masondo confirmed it was 'consented to by all members' and focused on 'strategic macroeconomic issues.'
The joint statement emphasized the importance of central bank independence, with the G20 reaffirming that monetary policy decisions should remain data-dependent and aligned with central banks' respective mandates.
This emphasis followed concerns raised at the meeting over the U.S. President Trump's repeated criticism of Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, which had unsettled financial markets.
Global economic challenges and delicate diplomacy
Though broad in scope, the communique avoided divisive specifics. It mentioned 'ongoing wars and conflicts' but did not refer directly to Russia's invasion of Ukraine or the conflict in Gaza.
Similarly, while it acknowledged 'extreme weather events and natural disasters' as economic challenges, it made no explicit reference to climate change.
The statement also recognized the role of the World Trade Organisation in advancing trade issues, while calling for reform of the body.
It did not use the word 'tariff,' despite planned U.S. trade measures set to take effect on August 1. These include broad baseline levies and additional duties on over 20 countries.
At just over 2,000 words, the communique was shorter than its October 2024 predecessor but was still seen as a meaningful achievement.
South Africa's Finance Minister Enoch Godongwana said, 'To achieve what we have done in this environment, I take it as a huge success.' Josh Lipsky of the Atlantic Council added that its issuance showed momentum ahead of the United States assuming the G20 presidency in December.
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