SA’s largest clothing retailer sees a successful Covid-19 vaccination rollout as key to reopening the economy and adding new stores, helping to mitigate the world’s highest unemployment rate.
“If we get people vaccinated, the economy can normalise quickly,” Pepkor CEO Leon Lourens said in an interview. “If the economy normalises, we can create jobs.”
The government temporarily imposed strict restrictions to curb the spread of the coronavirus from March 2020, but subsequent waves of infections have forced some measures to be reinstated. These include caps on gatherings, preventing major sports events with fans. Meanwhile, the country is cut off from many parts of the world due to travel curbs, hammering the tourist industry.
The economy went on to contract the most in at least 27 years in 2020, extending its longest downward cycle since World War 2.
“That’s not good enough for an emerging economy like ours,” Lourens said. “The unemployment levels are just not sustainable. We cannot continue like this.”
Africa’s most industrialised nation was slow to purchase vaccines and has still only fully inoculated about 19% of its adult population. The major challenge has since shifted from a shortage of supply to weak demand, health officials have warned, with hesitancy and scepticism widespread.
Large mining companies are trying to combat hesitancy and many are offering onsite vaccinations. Still, SA’s failure to grow the economy is likely to exacerbate its jobs crisis, said Neal Froneman, the CEO of Sibanye Stillwater,, SA’s largest mining-industry employer.
“The government has a view that they can solve unemployment by investing in massive infrastructure projects, but they don’t have the capacity and the competence to do that,” he said in an interview.
Pepkor, along with many other SA companies, is battling to recover from violent unrest that rocked the country in July. With about 550 of its shops damaged, the retailer still hopes to stick to its annual store opening programme of about 300 outlets a year alongside an ambitious refurbishment plan.
“If we can open 300 stores a year, we’re talking about 3,000 jobs a year that we create,” Lourens said. “But that we can only do in a growing economy.”
If the SA economy continues to suffer, the risk of further social unrest remains, he said.
“It’s just not possible for our economy to be in a good condition while our whole tourism sector is gone, while all big events are gone,” he said. “People often forget, and this is not even in the employment numbers, but for every theatre production, every wedding, every sports game, the informal sector works at those events.”
Bloomberg News. More stories like this are available on bloomberg.com













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