A political reckoning looms in South Africa, where
the ANC will face its toughest battle yet to win a general election
this year. Against this uncertain political backdrop and persistent
macroeconomic headwinds, the IT channel continues to struggle. But
there remain some bright spots.
A slow start to the year
South Africans go to the polls at the end of May
in what could be a watershed election for the country. The ANC,
which has ruled the nation for the entirety of the post–apartheid
era, may get below 50% of the vote for the first time in 30 years.
That may hand smaller parties an outsized role in who forms the next government.
This political uncertainty comes at a time of
persistent economic challenges. Inflation remains high (5.3%) and the
IMF has raised
concerns about the country’s debt–to–GDP ratio. The Reserve Bank
(SARB) is predicting annual
growth of just 1.2% for 2024.
Against this backdrop, IT channel revenues have
been declining since Q1 2022 thanks to unfavourable ZAR–US$ exchange
rates, and high interest rates and inflation, which are depressing
consumer and corporate demand and increasing the cost of imported
goods. Although distributors and resellers continue to create new
go–to–market toolsets, consumer and business channels started slower
in Q1 than in the previous two years.
A few categories posted growth in Q1 2024 close
to 2022 and 2023 Q1 figures – notably software, networking and disk
storage. However, our outlook remains flat for Q2, with all eyes on
the results of the elections.
CIOs focus on security
That’s not to say that channel activity is muted
in South Africa right now. Cybersecurity in particular remains a top
focus area for domestic CIOs, who are increasingly looking for
anti–ransomware solutions spanning on–premises, public and private
cloud environments.
Other notable news in the channel includes:
- ASBIS has become only the second Apple distributor in
South Africa after a long exclusive run by Core Group
- QBS Technology acquired local cybersecurity distributor
Maxtec, illustrating that global players are still keen to enter
the South African market
- Amazon Store has gone live in
the country with a focus on local SMEs
- Westcon Comstor
and Palo Alto Networks deepened their
relationship to help partners drive growth via the AWS
Marketplace
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