Cape Town, Stellenbosch and Plett rake in international visitor money

Data from payment provider, Yoco, shows that during December 2025, Cape Town, Stellenbosch and Plettenberg Bay accounted for 67% of all international visitor payments across the country.

This translates into R500 million flowing into local businesses and protecting and creating jobs, said Western Cape Premier Alan Winde, who delivered the Western Cape State of the Province Address on Wednesday.

“This is a Cape Town pastry chef who gets a permanent role in a new bakery. This is a Stellenbosch wine guide who can pay off his student loan. This is a mountain bike mechanic in Plett who can make the final payment on his business loan,” said the Premier.

He said as the country has been taken off the grey list, fuel prices are down, inflation is down, and the Rand is stronger than it has been in years. The green shoots of economic revival were most welcome in the Western Cape where economic growth doubled over the last five years.

“Nearly 90% of all net jobs created in South Africa over the last five years were created right here in the Western Cape. That means of the 404 712 total net jobs created, 360 347 of them come from this province.”

Winde said growth and jobs were the cornerstone of the province’s vision, because “nothing fixes a life like a job, nothing builds dignity like a job, and nothing puts food on the table like a job”.

He said 93 000 new jobs were created in the province in the last quarter and unemployment is now down to 18.1%, the lowest in South Africa.

“Since 2022, the number of small businesses has grown by 143 119. That is 55% growth, compared to only 18% nationally. The Western Cape Government supports this growth by cutting red tape and providing tailored business support.”

The SME Accelerator Support programme partners with the Johannesburg Stock Exchange to strengthen the investment readiness of small businesses. The programme recruited over 200 businesses with funding readiness support and matched 115 of these businesses directly with a range of funders over the past two years.

The province launched an inaugural TechTalks series, where 150 businesses obtained practical guidance on technology adoption, notably AI, helping small businesses harness innovation for growth.

“In aerospace, 20% of all satellites circumnavigating the world have components made right here in the Cape. The Western Cape has a booming boatbuilding industry producing vessels with cutting edge tech.

“The Western Cape is also front-and-centre in driving the revitalisation of the country’s ailing logistics sector. Our government fully supports Operation Vulindlela as a critical national reform programme to unlock economic growth, create jobs, and modernise the country’s economy.”

Winde welcomed measures that will relax competition rules for the country’s rail and port networks.
“Steps to return efficiency to the Port of Cape Town by investing in critical infrastructure are much needed and long overdue. The Western Cape Government will welcome private sector operators and investors with open arms to achieve this,” he said.

Further support is offered to jobseekers through the provision of free Wi-Fi at 1 600 sites across the province. By December 2025, the network had almost wis million subscribers.

After a successful, inaugural Western Cape investment summit last year, with a multi-billion Rand deal book, Winde said he was delighted to announce that five projects were now nearing financial close.

The following is set to be announced this year:
-R600 million in the green hydrogen industry;
-R1.8 bn in the manufacturing sector;
-R105 million in the tech industry;
-R250 million in the green economy (EV) and
-R400 million in the solar energy sector.

“These projects will create thousands more jobs for our residents. That is thousands more families with food on their table and a roof over their heads.” 

Social grants to increase

All social grants, barring the COVID-19 Social Relief of Distress (SRD) grant, will increase in the next financial year.

This is according to the 2026 Budget Review released by National Treasury on Wednesday.

The grant increases are as follows:

-Old age grant will increase from R2 315 to R2 400.
-War veterans grant will increase from R2 335 to R2 420.
-Disability grant will go up from R2 315 to R2 400.
-Foster care grant rises from R1 250 to R1 295.
-Care dependency grant will increase from R2 315 to R2 400.
-Child support grant will go up from R560 to R580.
-The grant-in-aid will increase from R560 to R580.
-The SRD grant will remain at R370, with payments to continue until next year.

“Social grants constitute the largest share of spending on social development. Excluding the [SRD] grant, spending increases from R246.6 billion in 2025/26 to R276.5 billion in 2028/29. The social relief of distress grant is allocated an additional R36.4 billion to extend payments until 31 March 2027 at the current R370 per month per beneficiary.

“The social grant allocation has been adjusted down over the medium-term in line with a lower inflation outlook and improved grant targeting and verification, which is expected to yield savings of R2 billion in 2026/27 and R1 billion in 2027/28,” the department said.

The Social Development function's overall budget will increase by some 4.2%, rising from R412.2 billion in 2025/26 to R466.4 billion in 2028/29.

“This supports poverty reduction by providing social grants, risk benefits through social insurance and welfare services. It also funds development initiatives, empowerment programmes, gender equality efforts, and advocacy for children, women, youth, the elderly and people with disabilities,” the budget review read.

Tightening controls

National Treasury reported that the 2025/26 allocation for the South African Social Security Agency (SASSA) was made conditional on the agency “improving biometric and income verification processes, undertaking more frequent eligibility reviews for social grants, and implementing other measures to tighten compliance”.

“By December 2025, the agency had checked the bank accounts of about six million clients and eight million credit bureau clients. These checks flagged 291 581 grant beneficiaries for review.

“As a result of the review process and strict implementation of the sliding scale, which bases grant values on recipients’ incomes, grant amounts were adjusted for 8 599 disability and old‑age grant recipients in accordance with the eligibility criteria.

“This results in projected savings of R36.4 million in 2025/26. A further 34 661 grants were cancelled, generating expected savings of R170.7 million by the end of 2025/26,” the department said.

The agency has rolled out biometric verification for new applicants to “strengthen beneficiary authentication”.

“It will intensify efforts to combat fraud and corruption, while ensuring that legitimate beneficiaries remain protected,” Treasury said. 

Steenhuisen to kickstart nationwide mass vaccination against FMD tomorrow

Agriculture Minister, John Steenhuisen, will this Friday officially kickstart the nationwide mass vaccination rollout against Foot and Mouth Disease (FMD) in KwaZulu-Natal.

The high-priority intervention follows the arrival of one million high-potency vaccine doses from Biogénesis Bagó, Argentina, on Saturday.

“As the largest single consignment of FMD vaccines ever to enter South Africa, the shipment marks the operational “kickstart” of the Department of Agriculture’s new 10-Year Strategic Plan to vaccinate the national herd,” said the department.

The department reported that millions of additional doses of the FMD vaccine have been procured and are expected to arrive in the country soon.

“The vaccination process is strategically phased starting with mass vaccination in the highest-risk areas and then moving to lower-risk areas,” the department said in a statement.

The rollout will take place at Colbourne Dairy Farm near Mooi River in the uMngeni Municipality. 
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