Consumer confidence recovers in fourth quarter

The recovery was attributed to a rebound in consumers' willingness to spend, relative to the previous two quarters in 2022. Photographer: Krisztian Bocsi/Bloomberg

The recovery was attributed to a rebound in consumers' willingness to spend, relative to the previous two quarters in 2022. Photographer: Krisztian Bocsi/Bloomberg

Published Dec 8, 2022

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South Africa's consumer confidence improved in the fourth quarter, a survey released on Thursday showed, although consumer sentiment remained "depressed" largely due to soaring inflation and large interest rate hikes.

The consumer confidence index (CCI), sponsored by the First National Bank (FNB) and compiled by the Bureau for Economic Research (BER), improved to minus 8 points from minus 20 points in the third quarter.

The recovery was attributed to a rebound in consumers' willingness to spend, relative to the previous two quarters in 2022.

"The significant improvement in consumer sentiment is positive news for the economy and suggests that household consumption expenditure is holding up - or even expanding slightly - despite difficult economic conditions," said Mamello Matikinca-Ngwenya, chief economist at FNB.

An upwards trend in employment growth and substantially lower petrol prices since the last quarter have bolstered consumer sentiment in the run-up to the festive season, Matikinca-Ngwenya added.

While the confidence levels of high- and middle-income households improved over the quarter, that of low-income households has deteriorated, the survey showed.

South Africa's headline consumer inflation quickened to 7.6% year-on-year in October, from 7.5% in September, data from Statistics South Africa showed last month.

Reuters