Tuesday, June 30, 2026

How rising inflation is affecting salaries in South Africa

Date:

South African Wage Earners Face Squeezed Purchasing Power Amid Rising Inflation

Recent data from the PayInc Net Salary Index shows that nominal take‑home pay for roughly 2.1 million employees edged up just 0.2 % month‑on‑month to R21,510 in May 2026, representing an annual increase of only 0.9 %. While the headline figure suggests modest wage growth, the reality is starker when inflation is taken into account.

Real Wages Continue to Decline

The index, which tracks workers earning between R5,000 and R100,000 net per month, fell 0.3 % in real terms month‑on‑month to R20,262 in May. Year‑on‑year, real wages are down 2.8 %. Over the first five months of 2026, nominal salaries rose 1.7 % but, after adjusting for price increases, purchasing power slipped by the same margin.

Independent economist Elize Kruger notes:

“While nominal salaries have increased slightly, the reality is that salary earners are losing purchasing power.”

This erosion of real income is placing growing strain on household budgets and is likely to curb consumer spending as the year progresses.

Inflation Driven by Fuel Price Surge

The South African Reserve Bank (SARB) reported that annual inflation climbed to 4.5 % in May 2026, up from 4.0 % in April and 3.1 % in March. The acceleration was chiefly driven by a spike in domestic fuel prices after the Middle East conflict disrupted global oil supplies.

In response to the worsening inflation outlook, SARB raised its key interest rate by 25 basis points to 7.0 % last month, postponing the anticipated easing cycle that had been expected at the start of the year.

Consumer Spending Shows Signs of Strain

Household consumption grew a meagre 0.1 % quarter‑on‑quarter in the first three months of 2026, a sharp slowdown from the 1.2 % rise recorded in Q4 2025. The modest growth was concentrated in essential categories—transport, housing, power and utilities—while discretionary spending on restaurants, hotels, food and non‑alcoholic beverages weakened.

A concurrent survey by First National Bank and the Bureau for Economic Research found consumer confidence at its lowest level in over a year, with higher fuel prices cited as a primary driver of the declining sentiment.

Confidence Drops Most Among High‑Income Earners

Sentiment deteriorated most sharply among consumers earning more than R20,000 per month. In the latest survey, 53 % of this group expect the country’s economic performance to worsen over the next 12 months, up from just 13 % in the previous poll.

Debt Stress and Interest‑Rate Anxiety

A recent poll by Debt Rescue revealed that almost half of respondents anticipate significant financial pressure if the central bank continues to raise rates. Nearly three‑quarters said they feel stressed, worried, anxious or overwhelmed by the prospect of higher borrowing costs, while 56.8 % consider themselves unprepared and 53.5 % feel financially uncertain about the next six months.

Outlook and Policy Implications

Although oil prices have eased slightly on hopes for a lasting resolution to the U.S.–Iran tensions, uncertainty remains about the broader economic impact of the conflict. Kruger warns that:

“Although there are signs that inflation pressures may ease somewhat in the second half of the year, uncertainty and volatility are likely to persist.”

In this environment, businesses are likely to remain cautious with investment and hiring decisions, which could dampen employment prospects and profit growth for the remainder of 2026.

For policymakers, the challenge lies in balancing inflation control with the need to support household purchasing power. Targeted measures—such as temporary fuel subsidies or tax relief for low‑ and middle‑income earners—could help alleviate immediate pressure while longer‑term structural reforms address productivity and wage growth.

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