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US tariffs will test SA's economic resilience

Cape Argus

|

July 30, 2025

ON AUGUST 1, the US will impose a 30% tariff on select South African exports, a move the Trump administration frames as a corrective to “trade imbalances” but which South Africa decries as a unilateral overreach.

- NYANISO QWESHA

President Cyril Ramaphosa has rejected the US justification, noting that 77% of US goods enter South Africa duty-free, with an average tariff of just 7.6%.

Yet, the policy threatens to derail South Africa's fragile economic recovery, destabilise global supply chains, and escalate protectionist tensions worldwide. This article examines the tariff's sectoral impacts, systemic risks to multilateral trade, and strategic responses to mitigate the fallout.

Sectoral impacts

1. Automative

South Africa’s automotive sector, a beneficiary of the African Growth and Opportunity Act (AGOA), faces existential risk.

Reuters reported that the US absorbed 6.5% of South Africa's vehicle exports (worth $1.8 billion in 2024) and is a critical market for manufacturers like BMW and Ford. The 30% tariff could force plant closures and mass layoffs, eroding a sector contributing 5.2% to GDP.

2. Agriculture

• Citrus: The US accounts for 5-6% of South Africa's citrus exports ($100 million annually), supporting 35 000 jobs. Tariffs may cede market share to Chile and Peru.

FLERE HISTORIER FRA Cape Argus

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Pastor uses soccer to unite communities

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Alnika's family finds solace in court ruling

THE family of Alnika Mitchell, 14, were relieved to hear that murder-accused Milosh Basson will remain in custody this festive season as the case against him was postponed to April 9 for further investigation.

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Doctor Khumalo throws his support behind Mbule

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Murder-accused AGU cops tell court they fear going to prison

'FED TO THE WOLVES'

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Protect workers against crooked contractors

WASTE management workers in Cape Town have once again been left in the lurch by contractors who pay low wages and steal from them by half-paying them, delaying paying them, or not paying them at all, enabled by the City of Cape Town's policy of outsourcing services, even in cases where such services are part of the City’s core functions.

time to read

3 mins

December 19, 2025

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