South Africa’s real gross domestic product (GDP) increased by 0.5 percent in the third quarter of 2025, marking the fourth successive period of economic expansion. The latest data released by Statistics South Africa illustrates a measured but persistent recovery trend across most sectors of the economy, amidst an environment of structural constraints and global economic pressures.
The report indicates that nine out of the country’s ten key production sectors registered positive growth during the period. Mining and quarrying led the way, growing by 2.3 percent, with platinum group metals forming the principal drivers of this increase. Additional support came from manganese ore, coal, chromium ore, and copper production, highlighting the sector’s continued centrality to both national output and broader regional supply chains.
Agriculture, forestry and fishing also showed notable improvement, reinforcing the sector’s resilience in the face of increasingly variable climatic patterns and structural bottlenecks. The trade, catering and accommodation industry similarly recorded a robust performance, reflecting a cautious resurgence in domestic consumer activity and regional tourism flows.
After enduring three consecutive quarters of contraction, the construction sector returned to positive territory with a marginal growth of 0.1 percent. Although this recovery is modest, it suggests early signs of stabilisation in an industry hampered by longstanding challenges including infrastructure backlogs, project delays and material cost pressures.
The only sector to post a decline was the electricity, gas and water segment, which contracted by 2.5 percent. This decline reflects the ongoing energy supply constraints that continue to undermine industrial productivity and the broader investment climate.
In the first two quarters of 2025, South Africa’s economy registered growth of 0.1 percent and a revised 0.9 percent respectively. This steady but slow pace of expansion aligns with projections issued by the South African Reserve Bank, which anticipates overall GDP growth of 1.3 percent for the calendar year. Policymakers have cautiously suggested the potential for this figure to rise to 2 percent in the near term, conditional upon improvements in infrastructure delivery and energy security.
This economic trajectory must be understood within a wider continental and global context. South Africa, like many African economies, continues to navigate the legacies of colonial-era spatial inequality, extractive economic patterns and fragile service delivery frameworks. Yet, the sustained positive trajectory of GDP growth reflects a degree of resilience, one that challenges reductionist narratives of stagnation or crisis.
Rather than adopting externally imposed growth models, South Africa’s incremental recovery gestures toward an emerging endogenous approach to development. This involves leveraging mineral wealth with a focus on beneficiation, deepening agro-industrial linkages and addressing youth unemployment through structurally inclusive policies.
While the path forward remains complex, marked by both global headwinds and domestic institutional constraints, the latest figures offer a glimpse of cautious optimism. They serve as a reminder that African economies, when examined on their own terms, exhibit varied and deeply contextualised pathways of resilience and renewal.







