2.3 · Sector Forests

Construction, Property and Real Estate

The short sector overview confirms that Construction, Property and Real Estate is highly exposed to system-wide pressures that affect both development activity and asset performance. …

Sector overview

The short sector overview confirms that Construction, Property and Real Estate is highly exposed to system-wide pressures that affect both development activity and asset performance. Against this background, the IRMSA Top 10 Risks below show how national risk conditions translate into sector-specific consequences for project delivery, property values, operating resilience and long-term investment confidence.

p65— see this page in the report

Verdict

Taken together, these risks show that the sector’s exposure is not confined to project execution alone, but extends across the full built environment value chain, from development feasibility to long-term asset performance. This provides a logical bridge to the next section, which considers the sector's wider strategic context through a combined SWOT and PESTLE market analysis.

p65— see this page in the report

Sector at a glance

GDP
Construction contributes about 2% nationally.
Jobs
Construction employs over 1.3 million people.
Output
Construction contracted in mid-2025.
Pipeline
Large infrastructure projects support recovery.
Property
Rentals and selected segments improved.

Priorities & outlook

Key priorities

  • Strengthen resilience, efficiency and inclusion while addressing infrastructure, governance, climate and affordability pressures.

p65— see this page in the report

Economic outlook

The sector remains strategically important, but growth is constrained by weak confidence, low investment and broader macroeconomic pressures.

IRMSA Top 10 impact

How the ten national risks land in this sector — AVE RANK 1 is the highest impact. Browse with the arrow keys; open a risk for its national profile.

Rank 1 · Economic crisis, macroeconomic weakness and a non-competitive economy

Demand and valuation pressure

Weak growth, high borrowing costs and low affordability suppress demand for new housing and commercial space, increase vacancies and payment defaults, and erode property valuations and cash flows.

View as data table
IRMSA Top 10 impact grid for Construction, Property and Real Estate, from the final report document.
RankRiskImpact labelImpact narrative
1Economic crisis, macroeconomic weakness and a non-competitive economyDemand and valuation pressureWeak growth, high borrowing costs and low affordability suppress demand for new housing and commercial space, increase vacancies and payment defaults, and erode property valuations and cash flows.
2Electricity, energy and national grid failureOperating cost escalation and asset unattractivenessPower interruptions and rising tariffs disrupt construction and building operations, increase operating and project costs, and reduce the appeal and income performance of affected assets.
3Critical infrastructure and capacitated infrastructure failureService quality decline and value depressionFailing municipal services, roads, water and sanitation weaken asset performance, raise disruption and maintenance costs, and depress property values, especially in smaller towns and weaker metropolitan areas.
4Governance and leadership failure, state incapacity and institutional breakdownPolicy uncertainty and shifted service burdenGovernance weaknesses and capacity gaps delay infrastructure and service delivery, create regulatory uncertainty, and force developers, owners and tenants to take on more of the service and resilience duties.
5Climate change and climate resilience failurePhysical damage exposure and adaptation costsMore frequent extreme weather increases damage and business interruption for buildings, drives up insurance and capital expenditure for resilient design, and undermines values where assets are poorly located or not adapted.
6Systemic corruption, fraud, unethical conduct and organised crime eroding the rule of law, safety and securityProject disruption and investor warinessCorruption, extortion, theft and vandalism delay projects, inflate costs, increase security spending and harm reputations, thereby weakening investor confidence in construction and property markets.
7Political instability and constrained cohesive politicsProject pipeline delays and cautious investmentPolitical volatility and contestation over infrastructure, land and spatial planning create regulatory uncertainty, slow approvals and can trigger unrest that disrupts sites and dampens investment appetite.
8Unemployment, income disparity, inequality and lack of social cohesionAffordability constraints and community conflictHigh unemployment and inequality limit rental and ownership capacity, increase expectations of local benefits from developments, and raise the likelihood of protests, invasions and conflict around projects and assets.
9Water scarcity and water crisesHabitability constraints and higher operating expenditureWater stress and failing municipal supply increase operating costs, constrain viable development in high‑risk areas, and require on‑site storage and efficiency measures to maintain habitability and value.
10Cyber risk and digital disruptionOperational interruption and trust concernsDependence on smart‑building systems and digital platforms exposes owners and managers to incidents that can disrupt operations, compromise tenant information and create legal and reputational challenges.

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Risks, controls & opportunities

The chapter's ten sector-specific risks with their typical control and the opportunity each unlocks.

Ranked risks

Risks, Controls & Opportunities for Construction, Property and Real Estate, from the final report document.
RankRisk
1Construction output remains weak with slow recovery.
2Rising costs and shocks severely reduce margins.
3Infrastructure backlog and weak delivery raise risk.
4Criminal activity and unrest disrupt projects frequently.
5Declining building activity raises oversupply concerns.
6Interest rates and inflation suppress property demand.
7Geographic and product concentration heightens exposure.
8Poor municipal services erode property reliability.
9Sustainability requirements increase climate compliance pressures.
10Safety incidents and labour issues delay projects.

Detail

Select a risk in the table to see its typical control and the opportunity it unlocks.

View full table (controls & opportunities)
RankRiskControlOpportunity
1Construction output remains weak with slow recovery.Diversification and cost management support stable cashflow.Reposition firms toward full infrastructure lifecycle value.
2Rising costs and shocks severely reduce margins.Escalation clauses and hedging partly stabilise costs.Grow local manufacturing and industrialised building capacity.
3Infrastructure backlog and weak delivery raise risk.Partnerships and oversight structures improve project governance.Increase bankable projects and secure infrastructure investment.
4Criminal activity and unrest disrupt projects frequently.Security measures and engagement reduce safety and disruption.Strong community partnerships enhance project delivery outcomes.
5Declining building activity raises oversupply concerns.Phased construction and portfolio reviews limit exposure.Repurpose properties to meet housing and mixed demand.
6Interest rates and inflation suppress property demand.Conservative gearing and stress testing protect portfolios.Benefit from lower rates and growing rental demand.
7Geographic and product concentration heightens exposure.Diversified tenants and planning reduce concentration risk.Expand into new regions, sectors and logistics assets.
8Poor municipal services erode property reliability.Due diligence and backup systems support continuity.Create premium value in well serviced urban precincts.
9Sustainability requirements increase climate compliance pressures.Certifications and retrofits improve energy and climate performance.Develop green buildings, attract finance and cut lifecycle costs.
10Safety incidents and labour issues delay projects.Compliance, audits and training strengthen site safety.Improve productivity, reputation and long term labour relations.

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Strategic context

Internal context — SWOT

Strengths

  • Relatively developed construction and property markets
  • Mature financial sector and project capacity
  • Strong linkages with infrastructure and logistics investment
  • Growing focus on green, resilient and self‑sufficient buildings
  • Sectoral experience with complex, large‑scale projects

Weaknesses

  • Prolonged low‑growth, cyclical downturn and margin pressure ‑
  • High dependence on public‑sector and SOE finance project pipelines
  • Governance issues, collusion legacy and trust deficits
  • Skills shortages and health & safety weaknesses
  • Fragmentation and vulnerability of smaller contractors

Opportunities

  • National infrastructure drive and urban regeneration
  • Growth in alternative and logistics‑related real estate
  • Retrofit, maintenance and resilience upgrading of existing stock
  • Regulatory and market incentives for green and social housing
  • Regional expansion and cross‑border projects

Threats

  • Weak macro growth, high interest rates and affordability constraints
  • Deteriorating municipal finances, infrastructure and service delivery
  • Energy crisis, load‑shedding and utility‑cost escalation
  • Climate change, extreme weather and ESG pressures
  • Policy uncertainty and expropriation / land‑reform concerns
  • Shifts in demand patterns (remote work, e‑commerce)

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External context — PESTLE

Political

  • Infrastructure policy, NDP and public‑investment pipeline
  • Land reform, expropriation and spatial planning
  • Governance and corruption in procurement and permitting
  • Security, crime and social unrest

Economic

  • Interest rates, credit conditions and affordability
  • Shifting real‑estate sub‑sector performance
  • Input‑cost inflation and supply‑chain volatility

Social

  • Housing backlog, urbanisation and informal settlements
  • Inequality, unemployment and community expectations
  • Changing work and lifestyle preferences
  • Health, safety and labour‑relations climate

Technological

  • Construction methods, digital tools and productivity
  • Smart‑building and Property Technology innovations
  • Data‑centre and digital‑economy linked demand
  • Project‑governance and risk
  • management tools

Legal

  • Property rights, title security and conveyancing system
  • Building regulations, zoning and planning law
  • Environmental, health & safety and labour regulation
  • Competition, collusion and anti‑corruption enforcement

Environmental

  • Climate change and physical‑risk exposure
  • Energy, water scarcity and environmental degradation
  • Green‑building standards and Environmental, Social and Governance pressures
  • Construction impacts, waste and pollution

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Construction, Property and Real Estate

UmphakathiVuka next steps

The previous analysis suggests that resilience in Construction, Property and Real Estate will depend on whether the sector can align investors, developers, contractors, municipalities, communities and labour around a more inclusive and adaptive built-environment agenda. Through the UmphakathiVuka lens, the next steps below translate sector risks and opportunities into practical priorities that connect resilience, public value, accountability and long-term competitiveness.

  1. UmphakathiVuka construction and property compact and governance

    Establish a shared compact for a just and resilient built environment that serves communities as well as investors, by convening developers, contractors, financiers, municipalities, state-owned enterprises, labour and communities to agree on the most material systemic risks, shared resilience outcomes and clear collaboration principles.

  2. Resilient infrastructure, housing and municipal precincts

    Align public and private project pipelines around climate‑resilient, inclusive infrastructure and human settlements, using scenario‑based planning to stress‑test projects against climate, energy and governance risks, while partnering with municipalities and communities to co‑create more resilient, well‑governed precincts that restore basic services and investor confidence.

  3. Climate‑, energy‑ and value‑chain resilience

    Reduce physical, climate and energy risks across the full asset life cycle through green‑building standards, efficiency retrofits, solar and backup systems, resilient site selection and better integration of transition and physical risks into design and investment decisions, while strengthening smaller contractors and developers through fair payment practices, risk‑sharing, joint ventures, mentoring, guarantees and tailored insurance.

  4. Community, labour and integrity partnerships

    Embed Ubuntu by sharing project benefits, protecting workers and managing social risks proactively, through structured community engagement, local labour and small‑enterprise participation, sound labour relations and strong health and safety, underpinned by robust governance, anti‑corruption measures, better procurement controls, disclosure and visible consequence management to rebuild trust.

  5. Adaptive portfolios, foresight and learning

    Improve long‑term competitiveness by diversifying and repurposing portfolios away from structurally weak central business district office and retail assets into residential, mixed‑use, student, healthcare and logistics formats, guided by long‑range scenario planning, regional collaboration where fundamentals are strong, and continuous monitoring and learning through risk and resilience registers and transparent performance tracking.

These priorities show that UmphakathiVuka should be treated as an implementation pathway for turning CPR risk insights into coordinated action that improves resilience, inclusion and long-term sector performance. In this way, the sector can strengthen not only its own commercial viability, but also its wider contribution to safer settlements, better services and more resilient communities.

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Sector vs national ranking

Each risk's national Top-10 wheel rank against its AVE RANK in this chapter's impact grid, sorted by the biggest shift. Rank 1 (left) is most severe. Select a row to pin it.

View as data table
National Top-10 wheel rank versus this chapter's printed AVE RANK for each matched risk, with the shift between them.
ThemeRisk as printed in the gridNational rankSector AVE RANKShift
EnergyElectricity, energy and national grid failure102▲ 8 more acute in sector
EconomicEconomic crisis, macroeconomic weakness and a non-competitive economy21▲ 1 more acute in sector
InfrastructureCritical infrastructure and capacitated infrastructure failure43▲ 1 more acute in sector
ClimateClimate change and climate resilience failure65▲ 1 more acute in sector
CrimeSystemic corruption, fraud, unethical conduct and organised crime eroding the rule of law, safety and security76▲ 1 more acute in sector
WaterWater scarcity and water crises99same rank as national
CyberCyber risk and digital disruption810▼ 2 less acute in sector
GovernanceGovernance and leadership failure, state incapacity and institutional breakdown14▼ 3 less acute in sector
InequalityUnemployment, income disparity, inequality and lack of social cohesion58▼ 3 less acute in sector
PoliticalPolitical instability and constrained cohesive politics37▼ 4 less acute in sector

Positions from this chapter's Top 10 impact grid (p65) and the national Top 10 wheel.