Among Ramaphosa's most pressing priorities will be to select a deputy president, a post he'd occupied since May 2014, and reshuffle the Zuma-appointed cabinet. With the national budget due to be presented to Parliament on Feb. 21, investors will be watching to see if he retains Malusi Gigaba as finance minister. Ramaphosa made no mention of planned changes in his address, but hinted that he may trim the size of the cabinet as he reviews the number of government departments.
"We will be initiating measures to set the country on a new path of growth, employment and transformation," he said. "Tough decisions have to be made to close our fiscal gap, stabilize our debt and restore our state-owned enterprises to health."
In his speech, Ramaphosa said his administration would call a jobs summit to discuss ways to create new jobs, finalize mining rules that have stifled investment in consultation with the industry and speed up the pace of land reform. He also pledged to speed up the pace of land redistribution, review the number of government departments and increase access to AIDS drugs.
A lawyer who helped broker an end to white minority rule and draft South Africa's first democratic constitution, Ramaphosa won control of the ruling African National Congress in December. Zuma quit late Wednesday under pressure from the party's new leaders, paying the way for his deputy to succeed him more than a year before the end of his second term.
How Zuma was toppled.
Ramaphosa will need to rebuild national cohesion, which was badly eroded under Zuma's rule, and provide greater certain about mining and land ownership policy, according to Mark Rosenberg, the chief executive officer of geopolitical risk firm GeoQuant. While Ramaphosa should be able to cement his control over the ANC and the government and ensure it is run more effectively, the task will be formidable , he said.
"This is not going to be an easy transition," Rosenberg said by phone from New York. "South Africa post-Zuma is a weaker state and a far more divided polity than it was before."
The initial signs are promising. Ramaphosa has overseen the appointment of a new board at the state power utility, which has been mired in graft allegations, while 10 suspects linked to the Gupta family, who are in business with one of Zuma's sons, have been arrested in connection with the looting of money from a taxpayer-funded dairy project.
"We should not expect change to happen overnight," Peter Hain, a former U.K. cabinet minister, who has campaigned against graft in South Africa where he was born, said in an interview in Johannesburg. "The South African economy is bequeath with corruption that needs to be worked out. Cyril is the perfect leader to do this though. He pulled a blinder in getting Zuma out. It's a momentous moment for South Africa, that brings new opportunity."