Everybody knows that Covid-19 has had a disastrous impact on the economies of countries and the finances of individual consumers, but it is only when you see the actual statistics that you realise the extent of the devastation.
The percentage of South Africans who are feeling the financial pain of Covid-19 increased to 82% in December, 3 percentage points more than in November and only 2 percentage points less than the peak of 84% in June, although most industries are fully operational. Millennials are the hardest hit at 86%, up 6 percentage points from November.
In a survey by credit bureau TransUnion to measure the pandemic’s financial impact on South African consumers, only 12% indicated that their household finances were going as planned during 2020, with 69% saying their finances were worse off than planned.
A high number of impacted consumers, 84%, are still concerned about their ability to pay their bills and loans, and if they have to skimp on payments, credit product payments are still the ones consumers most often indicate they will not be able to pay, with personal loans (37%), retail/clothing store account (32%) and credit card bills (32%) at the top of the list.
The financial devastation is also clear in the percentage of consumers who are cutting back on saving for retirement (26%), using money from savings (35%) or borrowing from family and friends (25%) to increase their cash flow.
However, South Africans are known for their optimism and 68% of impacted consumers indicated that they are optimistic and 19% pessimistic, while 13% indicated neither. The younger generations are more optimistic than older generations.
This is what financial devastation looks like:
According to TransUnion, it is also clear that consumers have been making changes to their household budgets since the beginning of the pandemic to increase their ability to cope with decreases in their household income. This is what they are doing:
Consumers were also asked to say how they planned to survive financially:
It was clear from the survey that digital fraud related to Covid-19 is still growing as a threat, with 42% of households reporting they had been targeted, up 14 percentage points from the 28% average reported in the first four weeks of lockdown. Scams related to unemployment are still the most common scheme (31%).
Households have also learned by this and now check their credit at least weekly (25%), significantly up from May (9%). In addition, 55% said that monitoring their credit was very or extremely important, up from 43% in May.
The survey was done online with 1100 adults in South Africa, from 1 December 2020 to 3 December 2020, in partnership with third-party research provider Qualtrics.
For more news your way, download The Citizen’s app for iOS and Android.
Download our app and read this and other great stories on the move. Available for Android and iOS.