Cape Times

South Africa targets rapid increase in trade with India

- NICOLA MAWSON

The High Commission­er Designate to India, Professor Anil Sooklal, said last night that two-way trade between India and South Africa has the potential to grow to $25 billion (R446.3bn) from the current $19bn in a short period.

India is SA’s fourth-largest trade partner as the sub-continent exports about $5.3bn in goods and services to this country annually, said Sooklal, speaking to Business Report ahead of the official launch of the India South Africa Chamber of Commerce (ISACC).

Sooklal said he believed that the new chamber could boost trade between the countries, especially when it came to creating awareness of the opportunit­ies that partnershi­ps with India afforded. India and South Africa have had diplomatic relationsh­ips for 30 years.

There are more than 130 Indian companies in SA that collective­ly employ more than 20 000 South Africans, he said. “Yet South African businesses don’t know much about the Indian market,” said Sooklal.

Indian companies represente­d in South Africa include Tata, Mahindra, Mittal SA, and Vedanta, which recently made a R21bn investment in South Africa, said Sooklal. “You have all of these major multinatio­nals,” he said.

India is rapidly becoming more important globally, he said. The country has the world’s fifth largest economy, which will become the third largest by 2027. It is home to the globe’s biggest population, and its GDP is valued at $1 trillion, which is anticipate­d by the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund to grow at 7.5% this year,” said Sooklal.

India has a population of about 1.4 billion, of which 400 million are middle class, said Sooklal. “That gives you a massive, massive market…”

He said SA should be benefiting from India’s vast economy, which is why ISACC is so important. Sooklal said it would assist companies in both countries to network with each other, address barriers to trade, and educate each other on how best to facilitate it.

An impediment is the lack of direct flights, which is something that hinders both the tourism sector and trade between the two countries, said Sooklal.

Currently, Tata’s Air India and Indigo are both looking at implementi­ng direct flights.

Sooklal said that India has one of the fastest-growing outbound tourism sectors, with 80 000 Indians travelling to SA each year.

Moreover, said Sooklal, India can assist SA with developing its small-, micro, and medium-sized enterprise­s, as this is a strength of the India sub-continent, with companies such as Tata having been started by families.

Lebogang Zulu, the chamber’s interim secretaria­t, said it was key for South Africa to increase its trade. “Our debt to GDP ratio in South Africa is just over 80%. We can no longer focus on only domestic spaces, we have to strengthen our spaces internatio­nally as a business community,” she said.

 ?? ?? LEBOGANG Zulu, interim secretaria­t of the India South Africa Chamber of Commerce. | SUPPLIED
LEBOGANG Zulu, interim secretaria­t of the India South Africa Chamber of Commerce. | SUPPLIED

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