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Xenophobic unrest in South Africa has become a painful cost of doing business, officials have warned, signaling that companies are bracing for prolonged instability in a country eager to attract new investment.

just over a week later mass protests Parts of Johannesburg, Durban and Pretoria were frozen – retail districts closed and emergency safety protocols introduced – officials say the threat of renewed disruption has soured boardroom sentiment in an economy already struggling with the world's highest unemployment rate, collapsed municipal services and intensifying political agitation.

Economists say an exodus of foreign workers will begin, which anti-immigrant protesters are demanding Labor shortage and economic shockUltimately hurting the local businesses and informal markets that activists say they want to protect.

Standard Bank Group chief executive Sim Tshabalala linked the instability to institutional failures, warning that xenophobia is an economic and geopolitical liability. Strong border management and a rational migration system would have delivered “much faster growth and much lower unemployment,” Tshabalala told reporters last week.

“Our collective stupidity and ineptitude on migration has caused us to lose the moral high ground in Africa, making it harder for South African businesses to do business with the rest of our continent,” he said.

For companies that move goods along the N3 corridor – from the Port of Durban to the Gauteng industrial belt, which handles hundreds of millions of dollars of export and domestic freight every day – contingency planning is already adding millions of dollars to operating budgets and cutting into margins in an economy that is still struggling to regain momentum.

“We are pricing based on the possibility that there will be disruption for a few days,” said a senior logistics executive, requesting anonymity due to contractual sensitivities. “This changes the way we run our business.”

Gavin Kelly, chief executive of the Road Freight Association, warned that a promise to organizers Taking out weekly marches until their demands are met has created further disruption in the area. He said, “This is a matter of concern because if the demands/expectations are not met, it may increase the risk of violence.”

Since last week's rallies, organizers have begun working Vigilant Labor Inspector – Entering factories to investigate foreign workers, forcibly holding meetings with managers and closing spaza shops, or informal convenience stores they claim to employ migrants. Iqbal Ismail, chairperson of the eThekwini Clothing and Leather Association, said there are already clothing factories in the garment manufacturing hub of Newcastle Cease operations.

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