The nationโs 130-year-old gold industry โ which has produced half the bullion ever mined on Earth โ is locked in the final stages of a decades-long death spiral. Most of South Africaโs gold mines are unprofitable at current prices.
Dwindling output has cut goldโs contribution to little more than 1 percent of the South African economy, down from 3.8% in 1993 โ the year before Nelson Mandelaโs African National Congress won the countryโs first democratic elections.
While the industryโs demise wonโt reverberate in the way it once would have, the mines minister has criticized Gold Fields Ltdโs plan to cut jobs as the ruling ANC seeks to shore up its base before elections next year.
Mines run by Gold Fields and Sibanye Gold Ltd have been halted by strikes over job cuts and wages respectively. Both producers cut their output projections for this year.
South Africaโs gold industry now employs just over 100,000 people, less than a fifth of the number that used to power the apartheid economy.
The economic and social impact of a further contraction in the industry will be magnified as every gold miner supports between five and 10 dependents, while creating two jobs elsewhere, according to the countryโs Minerals Council.
Higher wages and power prices, combined with the geological challenges of the worldโs deepest mines, will mean more job losses and less production in the country over the next five years, said Gold Fields Chief Executive Officer Nick Holland.
โWhen you work out the math, when you keep doing that year after year, you are going to go out of business very quickly,โ Holland said in an interview. โThe industry will just continue to see a slow death.โ
Sibanye, the countryโs biggest producer, faces wage strikes at three of its mines. CEO Neal Froneman acknowledges that pressure is building on the miner to resolve its safety problems after more than 20 fatalities this year. If that can be done, heโs optimistic that South Africaโs gold mines can survive a little longer.
โItโs an industry in decline, yes, and if sunset means the sun setting in 10 years or 15 years, thatโs still 10 or 15 years away,โ he said in an interview last month. โThere is still money to be made.โ
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