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IDP Conference 2004

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Title: IDP Conference 2004


1
SESSION 1 Economic development in the
Western Cape - Brendon Roberts Head
Dept of Economic Development Tourism
Western Cape Province 4 March 2004
IDP Conference 2004Developmental Governance in
Action
2
CONTENT
  • Economic Development WC Context
  • iKapa elihlumayo
  • Growth and Development Summit
  • Latest developments iKapa elihlumayo
  • Progress with Micro-economic Strategy
  • Drafting process
  • Preliminary picture
  • Provincial response
  • Closing remarks

3
1. Economic Development WC Context
  • Our Reference Points
  • Within national policy framework - i.e. RDP and
    GEAR
  • Social Dialogue through NEDLAC over many years
  • Nat. GDS Presidents call Social partners work
    together!
  • gt Government, labour, business community
    constituencygt To address key economic
    challenges
  • Growth
  • Investment
  • Employment
  • Overcoming poverty and inequalities
  • Peoplecentred development

4
1. Economic Development WC Context
Common Plan of Action by Social Partners
  • Promoting and mobilising investment and creating
    decent work for all
  • Ensuring economic empowerment for all, especially
    for black people, workers, people with
    disabilities, women and youth
  • Eradicating poverty and addressing the legacy of
    under-development
  • Strategically engaging globalisation to the best
    advantage of the country

5
1. Economic Development WC Context
Common Plan of Action by Social Partners
  • To give effect to this vision, the constituencies
    commit to
  • a) Building an enduring partnership through a
    shared vision.
  • b) Addressing urgent challengesSelecting from
    many possible interventions those which hold the
    promise of the greatest possible impact in the
    shortest possible time for accelerated
    investment, job creation, improved efficiency and
    productivity, greater social equity, and a fairer
    distribution of economic opportunities and
    rewards, while undertaking serious social
    dialogue on broad policy frameworks.
  • c) Lending a hand through active participation

6
1. Economic Development WC Context
  • National GDS vision
  • Making South Africa
  • The leading emerging market - destination of
    first choice for investors -whilst retaining and
    expanding social equity and fair labour
    standards.
  • A productive economy with high levels of service,
    highly skilled workforce modern systems of work
    organisation and management.
  • A society in which there are economic
    opportunities for all, poverty is eradicated,
    income inequalities are reduced and basic
    services are available to all.
  • A society in which our people, our most precious
    resource, are given opportunity/support to
    develop to full potential.
  • A society that promotes the values of social
    equity, fairness and human dignity in the global
    economy.

7
2. iKapa elihlumayo
iKapa Elihlumayo Growing Sharing the Cape
  • The Provincial Growth Development Strategy
  • Goals
  • promoting economic growth
  • creating empowerment
  • reducing inequality
  • broadening ownership
  • providing a sustainable social safety net
  • fight poverty, reduce disparity improve living
    standards

8
2. iKapa elihlumayo
iKapa Elihlumayo Growing Sharing the Cape
  • Shift in paradigm from welfare dependence to
    participation in the economy
  • Reorganization of Government budgets pro-poor
  • Reorganization of service delivery integrated
    cooperative
  • Recognition that Government cannot do it alone
    we need our social partners to join us to achieve
    our goals

9
  • Growth and Development Summit (GDS)
  • An effort of provincialising the National
    Growth and Development Summit
  • Invitation to social partners to participate in a
    Provincial Growth and Development Summit
  • - Preparation National GDS as point of
    departure
  • - Negotiation on 6 themes
  • - Provincial G D Summit on 14 November
    2003

10
  • Growth and Development Summit (GDS)

6 themes of GDS
  1. More Jobs, Better Jobs and Decent work for all
  2. Infrastructure, Investment and the logistics
    challenge
  3. Economic participation and enterprise development
  4. Human Resource Development
  5. Governance and Local Development
  6. Institutional arrangements for social dialogue
    and partnership formation

11
  • Growth and Development Summit (GDS)

Key outcomes of Provincial Growth Dev Summit
  1. A Framework Agreement on Growth Development
    in the Western Cape Province
  2. Commitment to making the WC a world-class region
  3. Agreement on the need for on-going,
    institutionalised social dialogue beyondGrowth
    and Development Summit

12
  • Growth and Development Summit (GDS)

COMMITMENTS (16)
  1. 100 000 nett new jobs by 2008(within priority
    economic sectors)
  2. Investment in priority economic sectors(through
    supply-side support measures, co-ordinated
    marketing campaigns focused on key global markets
    and public-private investments in collaborative
    sector platforms and projects)
  3. Expanded Public Works Programme(as short term
    amelioration for high unemployment of low skilled
    people and for critical economic and community
    requirements.)
  4. Provincial rapid response unit to defend
    current investments/jobs(comprising the social
    partners)

13
  • Growth and Development Summit (GDS)

COMMITMENTS (16)
  1. Strengthening the Proudly South Africa
    campaign(locally, in particular through public
    and private procurement processes)
  2. Investment in economic and social
    infrastructure(from the current 1.1 of GRP to
    2.5 of the GRP by the year 2008 guided by our
    Provincial Strategic Infrastructure Plan
    (informed by a Provincial Spatial Development
    Framework) and the integrated development
    planning process, aligned to the National Spatial
    Development Perspective)
  3. Improve investment environment(by increasing
    capacities and efficiencies and by co-ordinating
    policies and processes across and between
    different spheres of government, with respect to
    safety and security, and the regulatory
    environment for planning and environmental
    impact.)
  4. New investment in priority sectors (R5 billion by
    2006)

14
  • Growth and Development Summit (GDS)

COMMITMENTS (16)
  1. Human Resource Development Strategy(preparing
    youth for employment through 10 000 new
    learnerships, and alignment of Further Education
    and Training priorities with economic reality
    prioritise HIV/Aids, TB and fetal alcohol
    syndrome treatment)
  2. Effective SETAs and Provincial Skills Development
    Forum (to implement HR Dev strategy)
  3. Review regulatory framework for informal
    trading(conducive to developing micro and small
    traders)
  4. Comprehensive broad-based empowerment
    strategy(access for historically marginalized
    groups to procurement opportunities in public and
    private sectors)

15
  • Growth and Development Summit (GDS)

COMMITMENTS (16)
  1. Opportunities for co-operatives (nurtured in
    key econ. Sectors)
  2. Service delivery to small business (Integrated
    system)
  3. Incubate 100 emerging entrepreneurs (pilot
    project to graduate entrepreneurs - 30 women)
    through integrated system offering full spectrum
    of services)
  4. Integrated transport system (linked to urban
    planning)

16
  • Growth and Development Summit (GDS)

Extract GDS Framework Agreement
  • 6. GOVERNANCE AND LOCAL DEVELOPMENT
  • 6.1 Planning and Resource Allocation
  • 6.1.1 In the first instance, it is govts role to
    ensure effective provincial-municipal
    co-operative planning and budgeting through a
    provincial growth and development strategy (PGDS)
    that is aligned with the annual municipal
    integrated development plans (IDPs), which
    specifically support sector development
    strategies at the local level and include the
    Integrated Rural Development Strategy and Urban
    Renewal Programme.

17
  • Growth and Development Summit (GDS)

Extract GDS Framework Agreement
  • In this work government will ensure that the
    national spatial development perspective (NSDP)
    pervades the planning perspective throughout the
    province, that it guides sectoral and investment
    development spending and that there is an
    alignment of parastatal and state-owned
    enterprises delivery in support of PGDS.

18
  • Latest Developments iKapa elihlumayo
  • Effectively, iKapa Elihlumayo became the
    Provincial Development Strategy
  • It is informing the provincial budget
  • Six pillars of the IE strategy
  • A human resource development strategy
  • A strategic infrastructure and Logistics plan
  • A micro-economic strategy
  • plan for building social capital
  • A co-ordination/communication strategy, and
  • A spatial development framework

NB
19
  • Latest Developments iKapa elihlumayo
  • 2004 Six pillars being developed
    simultaneously
  • Post Provincial Growth Summit process
  • Municipalities part of the Government Sector
    part of postPGDS talks at PDC
  • Municipalities to be kept informed of GDS and
    PGDS process

20
3. Progress with Micro-economic Strategy
  • Province developing a micro-economic strategy
  • Goal?
  • To guide and direct Provincial involvement in
    the private sector
  • .. and the public sector for the purpose of
    achieving a growing sustainable (globally
    competitive) labour-absorbing Economy
    (see MTBPS 2003)

21
Micro-Economic Strategy (MES)
  • INTRODUCTION
  • Key Questions
  • Is there meaning in a provincial MES?
  • If so What are the most appropriate actions
    that a provincial government can take to achieve
    a sustainable, growing, labourabsorbing economy?

22
Micro-Economic Strategy (MES)
  • APPROACH
  • Look at global context
  • Look at economic trajectory without intervention
  • Look at SWOT to determine outlook for industry
    over 5 years and labour absorption (i.e
    unskilled)
  • Framework National strategy
  • Micro-Economic Reform Strategy (MERS)
  • National Research Development Strategy (NRDS)
  • Integrated Manufacturing Strategy (IMS)
  • SMME development (empowerment creator in response
    to market failure govt intervention)

23
Micro-Economic Strategy
  • EIGHT PHASES OF DRAFTING (8)
  • Phase 1 quick dirty exercise (team
    academics, prov. depts, officials ) not
    comprehensive - threats/ opportunities
  • Phase 2 Comprehensive first draft MES
  • Phase 3 Cabinet engagement 1st draft prepare
    2nd draft
  • Phase 4 Consultations with social partners on
    2nd draft
  • Phase 5 Cabinet engagement key inputs into 3rd
    draft, - Action plan and consider
    budgetary implications
  • Phase 6 Public launch across province
  • Phase 7 Incorporate into provincial MTEF
  • Phase 8 Implement interventions in action
    plan/budget

24
Micro-Economic Strategy
  • GLOBAL CONTEXT
  • GLOBAL Powerful forces at work in global
    economy. Division of labour Currency
    manipulation Oil price trade agreements
    proximity to ports job shedding
  • CONTINENTAL Afro-pessimism African Renaissance
  • REGIONAL SADC Free Trade Agreement
  • NATIONAL Macro-Economic Policy Currency
    fluctuation production move to coast

25
Micro-Economic Strategy
  • LOCAL CONTEXT WESTERN CAPE
  • The story makes depressing reading
  • Primary Secondary sector stagnation
  • Decreasing employment for unskilledgt Skills
    mismatch(e.g. tourism booming, but part-time
    labour used to meet skills requirements)
  • Very few sectors in the Western Cape offer
    significant employment possibilities to the
    unskilled and semi-skilled !

26
Micro-Economic Strategy
  • Economic trajectory
  • Growth Industries (if nothing is done)
  • Post Telecoms (cell phones, 2nd fixed line
    operator)
  • Wine grapes
  • Indigenous flowers (fynbos)
  • Beverages (wine)
  • Transport equipment (boats autos)
  • Hotels Restaurants (tourism)
  • Other business activities (film industry)
  • Food
  • Construction (driven by foreign property
    purchase)
  • Retail
  • Land transport

27
Micro-Economic Strategy
  • Economic trajectory
  • Shrinking industries (if nothing is done)
  • Citrus
  • Table grapes (water shortages)
  • Dairy poultry (foreign competition)
  • Aquaculture (long lead time for abalone)
  • Fishing (pressure on fish stocks)
  • Textiles (foreign competition)
  • Leather footwear (foreign competition)
  • Paper Publishing (foreign competition)
  • Chemicals (environmental concerns at the
    refinery)
  • Clothing (foreign competition)

28
Micro-Economic Strategy
  • Economic trajectory
  • Stable sectors (if nothing is done)
  • Everything else ( 30 sectors)
  • Vulnerability to global forces beyond our control
  • Deciduous fruit as an example Fashion
    varies demand New plantings in China
    New cold storage technology
  • Prevailing paradigm Start from what we have
  • Complacency
  • Lack of global business knowledge

29
Micro-Economic Strategy
  • Economic trajectory
  • Consequences for labour (if nothing is done)
  • Very few industries (9 out of 50) in WC use
    significant numbers of unskilled labour
  • Only 3 out of the 9 are expected to grow
    significantly in the next 5 years
  • 1 out of the 3 is expected to become more
    mechanized
  • This leaves 2 sectors to absorb unskilled
    labourHotel restaurants and/or
    constructioncombined they are 4.4 of GDPR

30
Micro-Economic Strategy
  • Economic trajectory
  • CONCLUSIONS (if nothing is done)
  • Based on analysis, GDPR in constant 2004 Rands
    would be 10 lower in 5 years time (all else
    being equal)
  • The outlook for the poor and marginalized looks
    very bleak, if nothing is done
  • Whats to be done? gt Select specific sectors
    gt Develop strategies and shape interventions
    gt Intervene !

NB
31
Micro-Economic StrategyIntegrated Action Plan
INTEGRATION
KEY GROWTH SECTORS
KEY INPUT SECTORS
CROSSCUTTING ISSUES
SMME
Exports
Transport
Infrastructure
Value Addition
Tourism
Telecoms
Access to Finance
ICT and Business Services
Agriculture
Energy
HRD
Geographic Regions
ICT
  • WC
  • Harbours
  • Technology
  • WC
  • Nat. RD Strategy
  • Biotech Strategy
  • AnimalHusbandry
  • Sheep

WC Building social capital
Cultural Industry WC Boat building WC Oil and gas
32
Micro-Economic Strategy
  • IMPORTANT FOR MUNICIPALITIES !
  • Analyse value chains/clusters forward/backward
    links in region
  • Region-wide sector specific inventions/
    innovationsRD for new products and services
  • A facility to identify major new areas of
    economic activity
  • MES to guide municipal align IDPs with MES.
  • MES to address municipal economic development
    challenges
  • Strengthen Provincial local coordination
    budget alignment
  • Establish municipal level economic database
  • Address capacity shortage in municipalities
  • Building relations of trust (social capital)

33
4. Closing remarks
  • BIG QUESTIONS
  • Can government pick sector winners?
  • Should government pick sector winners?
  • Should government not focus on market failures
    (like HRD) and generic support (SMMEs)?
  • INITIAL ANSWERS
  • Intervene in both areas as growing sectors are
    where SMMEs will develop
  • Government should influence the trajectory by
    encouraging the emergence of new areas of
    economic activity
  • Government intervention may mean financing
    initiatives and/or brining its influence to bear
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