Increasing Your Physical Activity Could Boost SA’s Economy By $500bn, A New Study Estimates

Fitness

We all know the personal benefits of physical activity, but do we ever consider the economic implications of how we take care of ourselves? A newly published study by Discovery Vitality in collaboration with RAND Europe looked at the link between exercise, productivity, mortality and economic growth. The results are astounding, to say the least.

The global study has insights for 22 individual countries across five continents and South Africa was one of them.

What’s the study saying about us?

According to Trading EconomicsSouth Africa’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP) is projected to be around $412 billion (R6.1 trillion) in 2020. The Discovery and RAND Europe study estimates that if the adult population of South Africa were to increase their level of physical activity by only 20%, over the next 30 years, South Africa’s GDP could increase by an additional $500 million (R7.4 billion). 

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“Insufficient physical activity is recognised as one of the leading risk factors for death, posing a global health problem associated with up to 5 million premature deaths every year (globally),” the report writes. 

READ MORE: 10 Power Breakfast Recipes Every Active Girl Needs In Her Life

“Although the health benefits of physical activity are well established, insufficient physical activity has become increasingly prevalent over the last decades. Responses to address this have been inadequate. Governments and public bodies increasingly suffer from competing priorities with finite financial resources, but also lack sound estimates of the economic value of increasing physical activity.” And this is why the study was done. 

The World Health Organization’s minimum guidelines for physical activity recommend that adults aged between 18 to 24 should at least do: 

  • 150 minutes of moderate-intensity aerobic activity each week or
  • 75 minutes of vigorous-intensity (HIIT) aerobic activity each week or 
  • An equivalent combination of moderate- and vigorous-intensity activity 

The report says that another way to reach an even higher ($1.2 to $2.1 billion [R17.8 to R31.2 billion]) gain to the GDP in the next 30 years is if all inactive South African adults adhered to WHO’s above-mentioned physical activity guidelines. 

Okay cool, but how does this impact the economy?

These are staggering figures and it’s only fitting that one would wonder: how

Essentially, the report focuses on how physical activity has an impact on the supply of effective labour. It outlines the three most major contributors to this labour which are directly linked with the benefits of physical activity. These include: 

  • Reduced mortality risk
  • Reduced sickness absence (absenteeism)
  • Reduced presenteeism (the Oxford Dictionary defines presenteeism as “the practice of being present at work for more hours than is required, especially as a manifestation of insecurity about one’s job”) 

“This is the first time that a multi-country macroeconomic model has been applied to the area of physical activity, facilitating a detailed assessment of the current and future implications of insufficient physical activity,” Hans Pung, the President of RAND Europe, said in a statement. 

Speaking to us, Discovery Vitality CEO, Dinesh Govender, tells us how they’re working to make South Africans more active through incentive-based methods. 

“We encourage, enable and reward our members for any way in which they got more active,” she says. 

“We also provide members who want to get more active with discounted wearables and gym fees, allowing them to work out more vigorously and get even greater rewards. It’s all about moving more than you did yesterday.”

So, the next time you can’t seem to get out of bed for the gym remember it’s not only for you – it’s for the economy!

Women’s Health participates in various affiliate marketing programmes, which means we may get commissions on editorially chosen products purchased through our links to retailer sites.

READ MORE ON: Fitness Fitness Advice

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