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Turning a shock into strategy: South Africa's measured response to the US 30% tariff hike

The Mercury

|

August 20, 2025

WHEN Washington's 30% tariff on South African goods took effect on August 7, outrage was the easy emotion. The better response is discipline. Within days, Pretoria set out a five-pillar plan that blends firm diplomacy with market diversification and practical support for businesses. If we execute with urgency and transparency, this shock can become the push we needed to reset and broaden our export mix.

- DR BRETT LYNDALL SINGH

Turning a shock into strategy: South Africa's measured response to the US 30% tariff hike

Keep talking, not shouting

The first pillar is engagement, not escalation. Cabinet has approved a revised offer that answers the issues highlighted by the US Trade Representative in its 2025 National Trade Estimates. The logic is straightforward: clear the technical hurdles, keep negotiations alive, and create room for the tariff to be reduced or removed. That is not capitulation.

It is the work of professional trade-craft: deal with the specifics on paper, then work through the politics. Some of those specifics are already moving. South Africa has confirmed sanitary and phytosanitary arrangements for poultry, blueberries and pork. These are dry terms, but they decide whether containers move or sit.

The USA-Africa Trade Desk has signalled that shipments of poultry and pork are expected within about two weeks, using the ports of New Orleans, Savannah and Norfolk. Containers on the water build more confidence than any podium statement.

Buy time, protect capacity

The second pillar is an economic response package that gives firms breathing space and preserves productive capacity. An Export Support Desk is up and running, with companies already getting help. The government has also announced a Localisation Support Fund and an Export and Competitiveness Support Programme to provide working capital and finance for plant and equipment. The competition authorities are preparing a narrowly defined block exemption for exporters so that businesses can coordinate on logistics and market information without falling foul of the law. In a world of tight margins and unpredictable freight, that kind of focused, time-limited coordination can be the difference between staying open and switching off a shift.

Diversification is the strategy, not the Plan B

FLERE HISTORIER FRA The Mercury

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