
South African President Cyril Ramaphosa launched a nearly $200 billion investment drive aimed at accelerating economic recovery and industrialization in the face of growing worry over the impact of the Iran war on the continent’s biggest economy.
For more than a decade, South Africa’s economy has barely grown, leaving it with crumbling infrastructure and the need to create jobs in a country where one in three people are unemployed. Ramaphosa’s pitch to investors in Johannesburg this week was that South Africa has fixed the worst bottlenecks: He said the country is opening key sectors to private capital and is ready for large scale investments.
Ramaphosa said the effort will run through 2030 with delegates at the South African Investment Conference pledging $53 billion across 31 projects spanning energy, logistics, manufacturing, and digital infrastructure. They include Coca-Cola’s $1 billion expansion plan, and a $3.6 billion commitment from Sasol — the world’s biggest maker of fuel from coal — to upgrade operations.
LATEST POSTS
- 1
‘We are the alternative’: Anti-Hamas Gaza militia tells BBC group is receiving international support - 2
Poll: 62% of Americans would oppose U.S. military action in Greenland - 3
The Best 20 Photography Instagram Records to Follow - 4
A Gastronomic Experience in Healthy Enjoyments: A Survey of \Nutritious and Tasty\ Solid Cooking Recipe Book - 5
Opening Potential: Self-awareness and Long lasting Learning
25 Most Beautiful Villages in France You Can Actually Visit
5 Breakout Stars in Ongoing television Series
Pick the Ideal Family Feline Variety for Your Home
Early diagnosis leads King Charles to scale back cancer treatment in the new year
Midlife weight gain can start long before menopause – but you can take steps early on to help your body weather the hormonal shift
Insight: Pills, TikTok, weight-loss apps and the consumer-driven future of GLP-1s
More than 3 million eye drops have been recalled from CVS, Walgreens and other national retailers. How to check if yours are safe
The Delight of Perusing: Book Proposals for Each Class
The Fate of Mechanical technology: 5 Headways Forming Tomorrow













