The third PwC Benchmarking Survey was conducted during November 2007 among 21 agricultural businesses and covered the 2007 reporting period, focusing on businesses with a turnover of R20,5 billion.

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The economic environment during this period was significantly positive. The inflation and interest rates were relatively low, mainly due to the 15% appreciation in the value of the rand. Unfortunately both of these rates began to tend upward again by the end of the survey period. Thereafter elements of nature, especially a drought in the northern grain areas, set agriculture back tremendously.
Bekker continued: “The cash flow of agriculture in general should improve due to low world stock levels of grain, as long as harvests and the most significant exchange rates remain normal. To this end, interest rates and fuel prices will also need to remain within certain limits. However, producers’ profitability remains under pressure due to international competition with Western countries that subsidise input costs. Coupled with this, business confidence remains impaired by local key issues such as land reform, which is not showing progress, and the production price index, which has hopefully reached its highest turning point.”
Agricultural businesses’ focus on black economic empowerment is in general positive, with the pressure to transform increasingly arising from the agricultural value chain. The vast majority of participants have already begun implementing their BEE plans, with additional business opportunities being a major incentive. The greatest problem that has been identified appears to be the delay in finalisation of the Agri BEE charter.
Agriculture is and remains the life blood of the country’s economy; in fact, along with primary food processing, it is one of the largest suppliers of job opportunities worldwide.
