For decades, South Africa has been viewed as the undisputed economic engine of Southern Africa, supplying manufactured goods, financial services, industrial inputs and consumer products to neighbouring countries. Yet beneath this well-established narrative lies an economic reality that is rarely acknowledged in public discourse: Zimbabwe has become one of the most important external markets sustaining South African industry.
By Our Insights Team
Recent United Nations COMTRADE data reveal that South Africa’s exports to Zimbabwe reached approximately US$3.85 billion in 2025, representing the highest level ever recorded. The figure marks a dramatic increase from levels observed a decade ago and highlights the growing importance of Zimbabwean demand for South African products.
At the same time, South Africa imported just US$454 million worth of goods from Zimbabwe in 2025. The result is a staggering trade surplus of approximately US$3.4 billion in South Africa’s favour, one of the largest bilateral trade imbalances in the Southern African region.
The trade figures tell a story that goes far beyond statistics. They illustrate the extent to which Zimbabwe functions as a critical export market for South African producers while simultaneously exposing how little value Zimbabwe captures from the relationship.
South Africa’s Dependence on Zimbabwean Demand
The latest trade data show that South African exports to Zimbabwe have almost doubled over the past several years, climbing from approximately US$2 billion in the late 2010s to nearly US$4 billion today.
For South African manufacturers, wholesalers, retailers and logistics firms, Zimbabwe is not merely another neighbouring market. It is one of the largest destinations for South African goods on the African continent.
Everything from processed foods, beverages and household products to construction materials, pharmaceuticals, machinery, chemicals and industrial inputs crosses the Beitbridge border daily.
The importance of this demand becomes clearer when compared with South Africa’s broader export portfolio. Zimbabwe’s annual purchases are equivalent to roughly one-third of South Africa’s exports to China, its largest single trading partner.
Considering Zimbabwe’s population of approximately 16 million people compared to China’s 1.4 billion, the scale of Zimbabwean consumption of South African goods is extraordinary.
Many South African factories that appear to serve domestic demand are, in reality, heavily dependent on Zimbabwean consumers for production volumes that sustain profitability and employment.
The Informal Economy Makes the Numbers Even Bigger
Official trade statistics tell only part of the story.
Cross-border trade between Zimbabwe and South Africa has long been characterised by substantial informal activity. Thousands of traders move products through legal, semi-legal and informal channels every year.
Industry analysts estimate that unofficial imports may add billions of dollars to the value of officially recorded trade.
If these estimates are broadly accurate, Zimbabwe’s total annual expenditure on South African goods could exceed US$6 billion to US$7 billion when informal trade is included.
Such figures would elevate Zimbabwe into the ranks of South Africa’s most strategically important export markets globally.
The implication is profound. South African economic performance is more closely linked to Zimbabwean purchasing power than many policymakers in Pretoria may realise.
A One-Sided Trade Relationship
While South African exports have surged, Zimbabwean exports to South Africa have remained comparatively modest.
The latest figures show imports from Zimbabwe standing at approximately US$454 million in 2025. Although this represents significant growth from previous years, it remains a fraction of what South Africa sells into the Zimbabwean market.
This imbalance highlights a structural challenge that has characterised Zimbabwe’s economy for decades.
Historically, Zimbabwe has exported largely raw or semi-processed products while importing higher-value manufactured goods. This pattern has contributed to persistent trade deficits and constrained industrial development.
The result is that Zimbabwe generates employment, industrial profits and tax revenues for South African companies while receiving relatively limited industrial benefits in return.
This is precisely the economic model that many developing countries are now attempting to move beyond.
The Emergence of Zimbabwean Industrial Competition
The dynamics of regional trade are beginning to change.
Several large-scale industrial investments have emerged in Zimbabwe over the past decade, signalling a shift from import dependence towards domestic production.
Among the most significant developments is the establishment of integrated steel production facilities capable of supplying domestic and regional markets. The emergence of large-scale steel manufacturing has introduced competitive pressures that were virtually non-existent a decade ago.
South Africa’s steel industry, already facing rising energy costs, logistics challenges and declining competitiveness, has increasingly found itself confronted by lower-cost regional producers.
Similarly, Zimbabwe’s rapidly expanding ceramics and building materials sectors have begun competing directly with South African manufacturers.
Companies that previously regarded Zimbabwe solely as an export destination are now encountering Zimbabwean products in markets they once considered their own.
This represents a fundamental shift in Southern Africa’s industrial landscape.
Why South African Businesses Are Growing Concerned
The concerns emerging from sections of the South African industry are understandable when viewed through the lens of long-term competitiveness.
For decades, South African manufacturers enjoyed the advantages of scale, infrastructure, financing and industrial capacity that neighbouring countries could not easily match.
Those advantages are narrowing.
Chinese investment, infrastructure development and industrial expansion across Africa are creating new manufacturing hubs capable of challenging established players.
Zimbabwe’s strategic location, mineral wealth and educated workforce make it particularly well-positioned to benefit from this trend.
If the country succeeds in converting its vast reserves of iron ore, lithium, platinum, chrome and other minerals into downstream manufacturing industries, it could dramatically alter regional trade flows.
Rather than importing steel products, machinery components, batteries and industrial materials, Zimbabwe could increasingly become an exporter of these products.
Such a transformation would inevitably reduce South Africa’s export dominance.
Lessons from East Asia
The experience of countries such as China, Singapore, South Korea and Vietnam demonstrates that industrialisation rarely occurs by accident.
Successful industrial economies typically pursue deliberate strategies that combine infrastructure investment, export promotion, skills development, investment attraction and industrial policy.
China transformed itself from a low-income agricultural economy into the world’s manufacturing powerhouse by systematically building industrial ecosystems around strategic sectors.
Singapore leveraged its geographic position to become one of the world’s most sophisticated logistics and manufacturing centres.
Vietnam emerged as a major exporter by attracting global manufacturers while developing local industrial capabilities.
The common denominator in each case was a clear national commitment to value addition rather than reliance on exporting raw materials.
Zimbabwe faces a similar choice.
The country can continue operating primarily as a consumer market for foreign manufacturers, or it can build competitive industries capable of supplying domestic and regional demand.
The Employment Question
Perhaps the most significant aspect of this debate concerns jobs.
Every dollar spent on imported manufactured goods effectively supports employment in the exporting country.
When Zimbabwe imports billions of dollars’ worth of finished products from South Africa, a substantial share of the resulting economic activity supports South African factories, transport operators, retailers and service providers.
Conversely, when Zimbabwe manufactures those products locally, the employment benefits remain within its own economy.
This is why industrialisation matters.
The issue is not simply about reducing imports. It is about creating productive capacity, increasing value addition and generating sustainable employment.
A stronger manufacturing base would expand Zimbabwe’s tax revenues, reduce foreign currency outflows and improve economic resilience.
A New Southern African Economic Order?
The latest trade figures reveal a relationship that remains heavily tilted in South Africa’s favour.
South Africa exports nearly US$4 billion worth of goods to Zimbabwe while importing less than half a billion dollars in return.
Yet the same figures also reveal an opportunity.
Zimbabwe has already demonstrated that it possesses the consumer demand necessary to sustain large-scale industrial activity. The question is whether that demand can increasingly be met by domestic producers rather than foreign suppliers.
If current industrial investments succeed, the next decade could witness a gradual rebalancing of Southern Africa’s economic geography.
South Africa will almost certainly remain the region’s largest economy for the foreseeable future. However, the emergence of a more industrialised Zimbabwe would create a more diversified and competitive regional economy.
The implications would extend far beyond trade statistics. They would reshape investment flows, employment patterns, industrial supply chains and economic power across Southern Africa.
For policymakers in Harare, the lesson from the data is clear. Zimbabwe is already helping to sustain South African growth. The greater challenge now is determining how much of that growth can be retained, generated and expanded within Zimbabwe itself.
The post Zimbabwe’s Rising Industrial Power Could Redraw Southern Africa’s Economic Map appeared first on The Zimbabwe Mail.