
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
6 Famous Urban communities for Shopping on the planet - 2
Instructions to Pick the Right Senior Protection Plan. - 3
Well known Tea Brands for Each Tea Sweetheart - 4
Amazon sued over 'punitive' handling of employee absences - 5
Cells have more mini ‘organs’ than researchers thought − unbound by membranes, these rogue organelles challenge biology’s fundamentals
This ‘CSI: Miami’ star spent years solving crimes on TV. Then she became the target of one herself.
Fundamental Archives for Beginning Your Business
They want better health care — so they're turning to crypto startups
Chicago reports first rabies-positive dog in 61 years. What we know.
Archaeologists uncover details about the Hjortspring boat's origins
NASA’s history-making moon mission aims to send the first woman and person of color to deep space
My Excursion to Monetary Autonomy: Awesome ways to save cash
Dr. Vinay Prasad's memo raises concerns about COVID-19 vaccines and pediatric mortality
They grew up with 'almond moms.' Now, they dread going home for the holidays.













