Home Business Agriculture to pick up by 5.3 per cent, spur economic growth
Business

Agriculture to pick up by 5.3 per cent, spur economic growth

Share
The Ministry of Economic Planning and Development yesterday released the country’s Medium-Term Growth Projections (2025–2030), which reveal a cautiously optimistic outlook.
Share

MBABANE – In 2026, the agriculture and forestry subsector is projected to pick up by 5.3 per cent, supported by the growing of crops as well as forestry and logging activities.

Growing of crops is anticipated to increase by 10.7 per cent, driven by additional land under cultivation from the Lower Usuthu Smallholder Irrigation Project (LUSIP II) as well as expansions in sugar cane production in the northern side of the country (along the Mhlume and Simunye areas).

There are also good prospects for other crops such as maize, cotton, bananas and vegetables, among others. Notably, the realisation of envisaged growth in crop production is highly dependent on favourable weather conditions. Negative impacts of the foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) outbreak are expected to continue to weigh on animal production, with the subsector remaining subdued in 2026.

The Ministry of Economic Planning and Development yesterday released the country’s Medium-Term Growth Projections (2025–2030), which reveal a cautiously optimistic outlook. Eswatini’s real gross domestic Product (GDP) growth is expected to strengthen in the short to medium term, primarily driven by infrastructure investments from both the public and private sectors, alongside new regional trade opportunities.

*…

Growth in outer years 2027-30 to average 2.9 per cent

MBABANE – Growth is expected to moderate to an average of 2.9 per cent between 2027 and 2030, with a peak of 4.5 per cent in 2028.

This slowdown is attributed to high base effects from earlier years and the completion of mega projects such as LUSIP II, Mpakeni Dam and major roadworks.

The construction sector is projected to decline sharply, averaging 6.2 per cent, though some large projects like the Strategic Oil Reserve, Ethemba Dam, Central Bank Headquarters and Manzini Mall will sustain activity.

On the upside, energy generation is expected to surge, averaging 22.9 per cent between 2027 and 2030 as new hydro, solar and biomass plants come online.

*…

GDP to average 6 per cent in 2025–2026

MBABANE – The ministry projects that real GDP will accelerate to an average of 6.0 per cent between 2025 and 2026, up from a revised 3.0 per cent in 2024.

Growth will be spurred by higher public and private consumption and investment, although export demand may remain constrained by global uncertainty.

In 2025, growth will be mainly driven by a strong recovery in the tertiary sector and resilience in the secondary sector, while in 2026, expansion is expected to be broad-based across all three production sectors.

The primary sector is projected to contract by 1.9 per cent in 2025, following growth of 3.1 per cent in 2024. This decline stems largely from the mining and quarrying subsector, which is expected to shrink by 18.8 per cent due to challenges in South Africa’s ferrochrome industry that have disrupted coal demand. The downturn has already led to retrenchments in Eswatini’s mining sector. However, assuming these challenges are temporary, the ministry anticipates a strong mining rebound in 2026, with growth projected at 67.1 per cent.

*Full article available in our publication.

Share
Written by
Nhlanganiso Mkhonta

Nhlanganiso Mkhonta serves as Business Editor at the Times of Eswatini. He reports on business, economics, finance, investment, entrepreneurship and public policy, producing insightful coverage and analysis of the issues driving Eswatini’s economy and the wider African business environment.

Leave a comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Don't Miss

Swazipharm blames ministry delays, commits to compliance

LOBAMBA – After being implicated in the delivery of medical drugs that were later recalled, prominent pharmaceutical supplier Swazipharm has reaffirmed its commitment...

Family sues EEC over E6m for Mpolonjeni child electrocution

MBABANE - The Eswatini Electricity Company (EEC) is facing lawsuit of more than E6 million following an electrocution incident that allegedly claimed the...

Shembe forgives Zulu King after video fallout

MBABANE – Members of the Nazareth Baptist Church in Eswatini have rallied behind His Holiness Unyazi Lwezulu Shembe after he publicly forgave Zulu...

Labour minister calls for healthy wages

MBABANE – The Minister for Labour and Social Security, Phila Buthelezi, has called upon Wages Councils to negotiate for fair wages. The minister...

Six pupils earn once-in-a-lifetime US exchange opportunity

MBABANE- Six different Mbabane high schools pupils have earned a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to represent Eswatini in the United States, after emerging as top...

Related Articles

EIPA defers 2nd Investment conference

MBABANE – Government has postponed the highly anticipated second edition of the...

Tribunal clarifies insurance tax rules in landmark ruling

MBABANE – The Revenue Appeals Tribunal Eswatini (RATE) has delivered yet another...

Business confidence improves as credit to enterprises up to E13.2bn

MBABANE – In a clear sign that local corporate entities are aggressively...

Embrace value addition – Standard Bank chief economist

CAPE TOWN, SOUTH AFRICA – African countries must urgently shift from exporting...