JOHANNESBURG — In a dramatic and unexpected twist of fate, South Africa is currently suffering severe economic whiplash after aggressively pushing foreign nationals out of the country. Driven by anger, jealousy, and high unemployment rates, local vigilante groups succeeded in chasing away foreign traders and workers. However, the reality of a country functioning without its migrant population has hit hard, leaving streets deserted, businesses shuttered, and local citizens facing the harsh consequences of a broken economy.
Anti-migrant sentiment has surged in recent months, culminating in nationwide campaigns and an unofficial June 30, 2026, deadline for undocumented migrants to leave. Thousands of African migrants have fled their homes, with some neighboring countries even launching state-funded evacuation flights. But as the dust settles, the very citizens who championed the exodus are realizing a painful truth: no country can survive entirely by itself.
“Save Our Jobs!”: The Unexpected Protests by Locals
In a shocking reversal captured on video, South African factory workers have now taken to the streets to protest against the removal of foreign workers. Demonstrators, some wearing local political regalia, are aggressively demanding that the government reverse the deportations.
“We are losing our jobs because when they are taking the foreigners away… it’s the foreigners who are giving us jobs! If they go, our bosses are going to close the factories. What are we going to eat? Exactly nothing!” — Local Protester
The industrial fallout is immense. Protesters are pointing out that local industries rely heavily on skilled foreign workers, and there simply aren’t enough trained local replacements available to fill the void overnight.
- Vigilante labor inspectors have been entering factories to force the removal of migrants.
- As a direct result, businesses such as clothing factories in the garment manufacturing hub of Newcastle are already shutting down operations.
A Bleeding Transport Sector and Empty Ranks
The daily hustle of South Africa’s transport sector has ground to a sudden halt. Taxi ranks that used to be bursting with life and commerce are now looking like ghost towns.
- Migrant workers and traders were the primary daily commuters, using taxis to get to work, supply goods, and conduct business.
- With the foreigners gone, local taxi drivers are sitting idle in massive lots, unable to make enough money to buy fuel, let alone feed their families.
- The desperation has reached a boiling point, prompting South African taxi drivers to launch their own protests against the anti-migrant movement leaders, furious that the xenophobic attacks have destroyed their daily income.
The Spaza Shop Void: Food Scarcity and Skyrocketing Costs
The aggressive shutdown of foreign-owned businesses has severely disrupted daily survival for the average South African. Popular local markets and business areas are now completely empty.
- Foreign-owned spaza shops which operate as essential, informal convenience stores in local communities, have been locked up or abandoned as their owners fled for safety.
- These small businesses were the lifeblood of the informal economy, providing affordable goods from early morning until late at night.
- Now, local residents are forced to travel vast distances to expensive, big-box supermarkets just to buy basic food items.
- Even major corporate supply chains are collapsing; the grocery delivery platform for Shoprite Group, Africa’s largest food retailer, faced massive disruptions because less than a quarter of its delivery drivers were actually South African.
The Domino Effect on the Economy
It isn’t just the factories and the taxis taking a hit. Local landlords who relied on the consistent rent paid by foreign shop owners and tenants are now staring at empty properties, crying out over the sudden, massive loss of their rental income.
According to recent data, while South Africa grapples with an unemployment rate of nearly one-third of its population, the 2.6 million migrants living in the country (about 5% of the population) were a vital economic engine.
| Sector | Immediate Economic Fallout Without Foreigners |
| Manufacturing | Factory closures due to a lack of skilled foreign labor and operators. |
| Transport | Taxi drivers are facing severe income drops and are protesting against xenophobia leaders. |
| Retail & Food | Local spaza shops are locked up, and massive delivery services are facing severe driver shortages. |
| Real Estate | Local landlords are losing crucial, steady rental income from evicted foreign tenants. |
The Bottom Line: Anger and jealousy may have successfully driven out the foreigners, but it took the local economy down with them. Removing a massive group of hardworking individuals from a complex economic ecosystem overnight does not magically create wealth for locals, it destroys the system from the inside out.
As economists have warned, restricting migrant labor often has unintended, devastating economic consequences. Will South Africa learn from this catastrophic miscalculation and welcome the foreign workforce back, or will they find a way to rebuild their crumbling economy completely on their own?
Stay tuned to ABT NEWS for more updates on this developing crisis.

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