Title: FREE STATE GROWTH AND DEVELOPMENT STRATEGY
1FREE STATE GROWTH AND DEVELOPMENT STRATEGY
- SMS CONFERENCE
- 30 31 AUGUST 2007
- DEPARTMENT OF THE PREMIER POLICY UNIT
2CHAPTER OUTLINE AND CONTENT
3CHAPTER 1 RATIONALE AND CONTENT
- Outline and structure
- Rationale for a provincial growth and development
strategy - Rationale for the review of the FS GDS
- Overview of the economy and geography
4CHAPTER 2 ANALYSIS OF THE SPATIAL, DEMOGRAPHIC,
ENVIRONMENTAL AND ECONOMIC PROFILE OF THE FREE
STATE
- CONTENT
- A spatial overview of the Free State (districts,
municipalities, settlement types) - Demographic overview and migration trends
- The environment
- The economy
5CHAPTER 2 KEY FINDINGS
- The Free State is divided into five districts and
20 local municipalities. The Motheo and Fezile
Dabi districts contribute 64.9 of GDP in the
Free State. - The following three municipalities have 43.2 of
the population, but they contribute 68 of the
GDP in the province Mangaung, Metsimaholo, and
Matjhabeng. - Large urban areas have 40.5 of the population in
the Free State and contribute 53.3 of the GDP in
the province. - The provincial population growth rate of 0.6
between 1996 and 2001 is considerably lower than
the national population growth rate of just below
2 per annum. - .
6CHAPTER 2 KEY FINDINGS
- The following main population trends are visible
in the Free State - a population decline in the former homeland
areas - continued urbanisation from farming areas to
urban areas - a decrease in the population of the commercial
farming areas - evidence of secondary or circular migration
- more profound urbanisation expected in the
northern Free State - out-migration to Gauteng
- a large-scale decline in the Free State
goldfields - and most migrants represent low-income
individuals or households
7CHAPTER 2 KEY FINDINGS
- Only 9 of the soil in the Free State is highly
suitable for agriculture. - Approximately 5 of the Free State is rated as
areas with high sensitivity iro the environment
(ratings 4-7). - With the opening up of the South African economy
to world markets, it also became more vulnerable
to international volatility in the markets. - According to the narrow definition of
unemployment, the Free State has an unemployment
rate of 30. - Although between 1996 and 2004, the Free States
growth rate was 20.7, the 2003 growth was 3.3.,
3.9 in 2004 and 4.2 in 2005 - The Free State has 1.7 million (55.9) people
living in poverty.
8CHAPTER 3 AN ANALYIS OF THE SOCIAL, HUMAN AND
GOVERNANCE PROFILE OF THE FREE STATE
- GENERAL APPROACH
- DEVELOPMENTAL / INTERNATIONAL LINK
- POLICY LINK
- TRENDS IN THE FREE STATE
- SPATIAL REFERENCING
9CHAPTER 3 CONTENT
- Education
- Labour and skills development
- Health
- Housing
- Basic infrastructure
- Transport infrastructure
- Sport, recreation and cultural activities
- Social services
- Criminal justices and crime prevention
- Disaster management
- Governance
- ICT
10CHAPTER 3 KEY FINDINGS
- The functional literacy rate in the Free State is
65. - Although there has been very good progress in
respect of the Grade Twelve pass rate, the
university exemption rate and the number of
learners passing with mathematics, science, and
information technology remain low. - The repositioning of the FET sector could play a
role in addressing the problem of school
drop-outs. - The maternal death rate is estimated at 150 per
100 000 live births. - The child mortality rate is estimated at 76.7 per
1000 live births. - The HIV and AIDS prevalence rate is estimated at
16.7. - The housing need (those households residing in
informal dwellings) have increased between 1996
and 2001. Overall, the number of households that
have grown faster than the population contributed
to this increase in the housing need - Nearly 50 of the housing backlog in the Free
State is found in Mangaung and Matjhabeng.
11CHAPTER 3 KEY FINDINGS
- By 2001, 85.3 of households in the Free State
had water on the stand or in the house, 54.5 had
acceptable sanitation, 74.9 had access to
electricity, 58 had their refuse removed once
per week, and 35 had a telephone in their
dwelling - The largest service backlogs are in Mangaung,
Matjhabeng, Maluti-a-Phofung, Setsoto, and
Metsimaholo. - The Provinces road network comprises about 1
615km of national roads, 6 316km of surfaced
roads, 21 486km of gravel secondary roads, and
22Â 000km of gravel tertiary roads. A high
percentage of roads, 60, are in a poor or very
poor condition. - Considering poverty, 57.1 of households (432579
households) are earning less than R800 per month
and thus reside in poverty. - Approximately 158 000 criminal cases are reported
in the Free State annually (2004). - The five main possible disasters in the Free
State are droughts, floods, veld fires,
accidents, and chemical spillage (both on the
road and in respect of industry in Metsimaholo). - Currently, 12 municipalities are under project
consolidate. - One municipality and six provincial government
departments have received unqualified auditing
reports in 2004/05. - The ICT sector in government and private sector
will play an increasing role in future.
12CHAPTER 4 AN ASSESSMENT OF GROWTH POTENTIAL,
CAPACITY AND CONSTRAINTS
- APPLICATION OF THE NSDP AT PROVINCIAL LEVEL
- SIX AREAS OF POTENTIAL
- Innovation and experimentation
- High value differentiated goods
- Mass produced goods
- Public services
- Other services
- Tourism
- NEED VS POTENTIAL
13Innovation and experimentation
- Key indicators
- Graduates physical sciences, maths, engineering
- population with Honours or higher
14High value, differentiated goods
- Key indicators
- GVA fuel, rubber and plastics
- GVA electronics
- Value of exports of electronics
- Employment in concerns manufacturing fuel, rubber
and plastics - Employment in electronics concerns
- Value of exports fuel, rubber and plastics
15Mass produced goods
- Key indicators
- GVA Mining
- GVA Agriculture (1996 2004)
- GVA Manufacturing (excluding fuel, rubber,
plastics electronics) - Employment in mining
- Employment in agriculture
- Employment in manufacturing (excluding fuel,
rubber, plastics electronics)
16Public services
- Key indicators
- Municipal debt (over 30 days) as a ratio of
number of households - of population as senior officials and managers
professionals technicians and associated
professionals - of people employed in public admin and defence
- University exemption rate for Grade Twelve
(indication of successful education delivery) - of people employed in health and social work
17Retail and private services
- Key indicators
- GVA retail and finance
- Employment in retail and finance
- Overall household income in the locality
18TOURISM
- Key indicators
- Number of establishments in entertainments and
tourism sector - Number of people employed in hotels and
restaurants - GVA contribution of tourism
19DEVELOPMENT POTENTIAL
20DEVELOPMENT NEED
- Key indicators
- Number of disabled people per locality
- The percentage of people without schooling or
with limited schooling per locality - The percentage of people who are unemployed
- Number of households residing in informal
dwellings ) - Number of people without access to adequate
sanitation (current access in terms of an
unventilated pit latrine, bucket or none) - Number of people without access to water within
200m from their stand - Number of people with an income below R3 500 per
month.
21Chapter 4 Key findings
- Development potential is mostly located in the
three large urban agglomerations in the Free
State Bloemfontein (Mangaung), Sasolburg
(Metsimaholo), and Welkom (Matjhabeng). However,
Welkom (Matjhabeng) has been negatively
influenced by the declining mining industry. It
should also be noted that Mangaung and Matjhabeng
are grouped with Maluti-a-Phofung as areas with
high need in the Free State. - The NSDP suggests that, to achieve impact in
terms of economic growth, areas with development
potential should be targeted. - As is the case nationally, development needs are
mostly (except in the case of Maluti-a-Phofung)
located in the areas with high development
potential. - It should also be borne in mind that areas with
limited development potential should be
prioritised in terms of investment in their
people (skills development, education, social
services, social security, etc) - Finally, it should be borne in mind that the NSDP
suggests that any area, which is categorised as
having no potential or only limited potential,
should be able to showcase its potential..
22CHAPTER 5 DETERMINING PRIORITIES AND IMPLICATIONS
1) Economic development 2) Human and social
development 3) Crime and justice 4) Good
governance
Key priority areas of the FS
Alignment issues
Vision 2014
BARRIERS
DEVELOP MENT TRAJEC- TORY
TRADE- OFFS
MDGs
23PRIORITIES AND IMPLICATIONS ECONOMIC GROWTH
- Sectoral trade-offs
- Manufacturing
- Agriculture
- Transport
- Tourism
- Sectors to nurse Mining and construction
- Enablers
- SMME development
- Economic infrastructure
- Human resource development (because of the
identified barrier) - Creating environment (in addition to the above
enablers) - Addressing unemployment and poverty
- Economic growth
- Social safety nets
24PRIORITIES AND IMPLICATIONS SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT
- Literacy and education
- Adequate health
- Shelter and services
- Free basic services
25PRIORITIES AND IMPLICATIONS CRIME AND JUSTICE
- In this regard violent crimes and
business-related crime should be prioritised in
terms of police action. - To a greater extent, domestic crime should be
handled through CPFs and awareness campaigns. - The spatial distribution of crime in the Free
State, as well as the spatial distribution
economic potential, should be taken into account.
- The eastern border with Lesotho is a crucial
spatial priority area in respect of stock theft. - Although reacting to crimes and providing a
service to people who are victims of crimes is
essential, consideration should also be given to
crime prevention. - Success in solving crimes is also closely related
to the link with the criminal justice system.
Emphasis should therefore be placed on reducing
the waiting lists in respect of court cases. - Youth offenders should also receive special
attention in respect of the justice system. -
26PRIORITIES AND IMPLICATIONS Good governance
- Key issues
- Financial management
- Key barriers
- Alignment of IDPs with budgets as well as the
FSGDS. - The quality of IDPs remains weak.
- Asset and financial management remain serious
obstacles. - Effective communication with stakeholders and
clients remains a problem. - Ensuring effective human resource management is
problematic. - Effective financial management and problems of
corruption and ethical behaviour need to be
addressed - Ensuring effective monitoring and evaluation.
27CHAPTER 6 SETTING STRATEGIC DIRECTION
- Chapters 2-4 Analysis
- Chapter 5 Determining priorities
- Chapter 6 Looking forward doing the planning
28Vision and mission
- Vision A unified prosperous Free State which
fulfils the needs of all its people - Mission Serving the people of the Province by
working effectively with our social partners
through (i) Economic growth, development and
employment (ii) Social and human development
(iii) Justice and crime prevention (iv) Efficient
governance and administration
29Basic principles
- Apply the principles of sustainable development
- Acknowledge the ecological limitation of the
environment - Ensure alignment between all spheres of
government. - Ensure integrated development planning and
implementation. - Actively address economic and social
inequalities. - Promote economic infrastructure investment and
development spending in areas of potential and
need according to the principles of the NSDP. - Acknowledge the importance of BEE as well as the
need to broaden the access to the economy. - Promote labour intensive approaches to development
30ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT, EMPLOYMENT AND INVESTEMENT
- Objectives
- To achieve an economic growth rate of 6-7 per
annum - To reduce unemployment from 30 to 15
- To reduce the number of households living in
poverty by 5 per annum - To provide adequate infrastructure for economic
growth and development - How do we achieve the above? Our 4 drivers
(manufacturing, agric, transport, tourism) and 4
enabling strategies (SMMEs, infrastructure,
enabling environment, human skills development)
31SOCIAL AND HUMAN DEVELOPMENT
- Objectives
- To improve the functional literacy rate from
65.3 to 85 - To reduce mortality of children under five years
to less than 65 per 1000 births - To reduce the maternal mortality rate from 150 to
100 per 100 000 live births of women in the
reproductive group - To stabilise the prevalence rate of HIV and AIDS
and reverse the incidence thereof - To provide shelter for all in the Province
- To provide free basic services to all households
- To reduce the number of households living in
poverty by 5 per annum - How will we achieve the above? Basic services
and housing Improving health care and combating
disease improving educational services basic
safety net improved cultural, sports and
recreational services
32JUSTICE, CRIME PREVENTION AND SECURITY
- Objectives
- reduce the crime rate by at least 7 per annum.
- To reduce the number of road accident deaths by
3 per annum. - How will we do this?
- To facilitate and improve an effective integrated
criminal justice system - To ensure an effective and efficient police
service in the Province - To establish an effective disaster prevention and
response capacity for disasters throughout the
Province - To improve traffic policing and road incident
management in the Province - To implement a Provincial EMS Plan
- To ensure a safe and secure environment at all
institutions.
33GOVERNANCE AND ADMINISTRATION
- Objectives
- To eliminate qualified auditing reports for
provincial departments by 2009 and for
municipalities by 2011 - To eliminate the 12 municipalities which receive
extraordinary provincial and national support
(currently called Project Consolidate) by 2010. - How will we do this?
- Improve IDPs and IDP implementation.
- Ensure effective communication with stakeholders
and clients. - Promote BEE.
- Ensure effective Human Resource Development and
Management. - Ensure improvement in financial management.
- Promote integrity in government.
- Establish proper management information and
record management systems. - Improve asset management.
- Build governments capacity in critical areas.
- Ensure a healthy environment through integrated
environmental management. - Monitor, evaluate and review the FSGDS.
34CHAPTER 7 IMPLEMENTATION FRAMEWORK
35CHAPTER 8IMPLEMENTATION ARRANGEMENTS
- Institutional arrangements
- Implementation, resource allocation and budgeting
- Provincial departments
- National Departments
- Municipalities
- Social Partners
- E-monitoring and evaluation
36THANK YOU
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