Title: Accelerating%20Growth%20and%20Development:
1- Accelerating Growth and Development
- The Contribution of an Integrated Manufacturing
Strategy
2OUTLINE
- Process issues
- A vision for the economy
- Extending a policy tradition
- Analysis informing the strategy
- The challenge
- Governments response
- The role of the Integrated Manufacturing Strategy
- The platform of Microeconomic Reform
- What can you expect from the dti?
- A challenge to stakeholders
- Measuring our performance
- The way forward
3Process issues
Parliament, Nedlac, other dialogues
Extensive consultations and dialogue
4A Vision for the economy by 2014
- We need an economy that can meet the needs of our
economic citizens in a sustainable way - Access to quality work and enterprise
opportunities necessary capacities and skills - Platform of economic efficiency, inputs,
infrastructure, government service etc. - Adaptive, innovative competitive enterprises
- Consumer access to quality goods services
effective protection legislation and recourse
mechanisms - Built on the potential of all our people,
resources and geographic areas
5Extending our policy tradition
- A vision beginning with the Freedom Charter
- RDP objectives
- GEAR programme
- Geographic strategies
- Integrated Economic Action Plan
- Microeconomic Reform Strategy
6AnalysisPolicy and manufacturing before 1994
- Resource-oriented, especially minerals, energy
and agriculture - Industrial Policy import-substitution,
resource-driven - Apartheid policy legacy included
- racial and geographic inequalities
- distorted demand
- restricted skills development
- Inefficiencies
- inward-orientation, with poor linkages to the
region and the world - restricted access to economic assets
opportunities -gt limited capacity for savings,
investment and enterprise development.
7AnalysisThe challenge faced in 1994
- Interventions required to address both domestic
conditions and integration into the global
economy - Trends in the domestic economy
- Diverse manufacturing base
- Continued inward-orientation
- Concentration of ownership lack of equity
- Global trends
- Liberalisation and acceleration of global capital
flows - Selective trade liberalisation
- Systems of global governance with unfair outcomes
- Dangers of marginalisation
8AnalysisPolicy interventions since 1994
- Macroeconomic reform to address crises
- Initial set of microeconomic reform measures
- Trade reform tariff simplification and trade
negotiations (multilateral free trade
agreements) - Supply-side measures
- Small business
- Competition policy
- Regulatory reform
- Institutional transformation
- Some sector-specific programmes
- Geographic programmes e.g. SDIs
- Some consumer protection reform
- Wider reforms
- Labour law dispensation and skills development
- Agriculture and land reform
- Development of a consultative approach
9AnalysisManufacturing performance since 1994
- Some progress made
- Slow growth, but avoided deindustrialisation
- Increased export orientation and integration into
global markets - Increased share of manufacturing in exports
- Some sectors doing particularly well e.g. auto
- Improved opportunities for market access
- Diversification of markets reduced vulnerability
- Increased productivity
10AnalysisManufacturing performance since 1994
- But
- Declining share of global trade
- Trade balance still net importer of manufactured
goods - Continued job losses within manufacturing
- Casualisation, subcontracting informalisation
- Particular decrease in demand for unskilled
labour, increase in skilled labour demand - Productive investment too low
- Declining investment in technology RD
- Limited progress in relation to small business
development, BEE and geographic equity - Poverty and inequality still severe
- Continued geographical inequality
- Underlying constraints to future competitiveness
and equity e.g. inputs, telecomms infrastructure
requisite skills
11AnalysisOld ways of gaining competitiveness
will not work in future
- Raw materials
- Unskilled labour
- Proprietary production technology
- Privileged access to markets
12AnalysisNew sources of competitiveness
- Information and Communication Technologies
- Technology diffusion
- Time, efficiency and responsiveness
- Integration of value chains
- Economic participation and equity developing
human and economic potential
13The challenge we face
- We face numerous constraints
- distortions in our domestic economy
- our relationship to the global economy
- the changing basis of competitiveness away from
our previous areas of advantage - We need to develop our domestic potential by
strategically engaging with the global economy - Minimise marginalisation
- Maximise our use of opportunities to achieve
national objectives
14Governments response to the challenge
Enable competitive, adaptive
job-creating sectors enterprises
Integrated Manufacturing Strategy
Platform of efficiency reduced constraints to
growth development across the economy
Microeconomic Reform Strategy
Sustainable Growth-oriented Macroeconomic
Framework
15The foundation provided by the Microeconomic
Reform Strategy
- Coordinated action across government on issues
beyond the authority of any single department - Improve efficiency of the economy as a whole and
reduce barriers to entry - Key performance areas
- growth
- competitiveness
- employment
- small business development
- BEE
- geographic equity
16The foundation provided by the Microeconomic
Reform Strategy (2)
- Key programmes
- Input sectors (telecomms, energy, transport)
efficiency and access - Cross-cutters infrastructure, HRD, access to
finance, technology innovation - Priority sectors agriculture, tourism, ICTs,
cultural, exports (auto, clothing textiles,
metals beneficiated minerals, agro-processing,
chemicals)
17Objective of the Integrated Manufacturing Strategy
- Accelerate growth, employment and equity through
developing high value adding, knowledge-intensive
integrated manufacturing built on our full
potential - HOW?
- Address constraints in the domestic economy to
create a platform for competitiveness and
economic participation - Integrate to our advantage into the global
economy - Equip our enterprises to compete on the basis of
new drivers of competitiveness - Integrate equity objectives into each aspect of
the strategy - Build partnerships and cooperation between
economic stakeholders
18What is the IMS? (1)
- A vision for the growth path of manufacturing
- A series of interventions by government to help
achieve that vision - A call to action for all economic stakeholders
19What is the IMS? (2)
- A strategy for manufacturing in the wider sense
including all activities associated with the
production of goods - Uses the conceptual tool of integrated value
matrices to understand production and how best to
intervene effectively
20Integrated Value Matrices Leather
21Value matrices interconnections Auto
Components
Chemicals/Plastics e.g. bumpers, trim
Textiles/Synthetics, natural fibres e.g.
environmentally sound interior trim
ICT
Automotive Sector 5 of GDP
Finance e.g vehicle finance
Metals/carbon steel, aluminium, stainless,
magnesium
Engineering services
10 steel industry output consumed by auto
Agro /leather e.g. leather seats
Suppliers of consumables
Leather seats 16 of component exports
Design
Tool Die Making
Estimated impact on GDP 8
22What is the IMS? (3)
- Integrated action with regard to
- Market access
- Beneficiation and value addition
- Equity and economic participation
- Regional production
- Knowledge intensity and services integration
- Development of integrated value matrices
23What can you expect from the dti?
- Championing competitiveness within government in
a way that supports equity - Packages of customised services and products in
prioritised sectors, developed in partnership
with stakeholders - More accessible and efficient broad-based
services across the economy, to provide a
platform for efficiency and equity
24What can you expect from the dti?Championing
Competitiveness
- Leadership role in the economic employment
cluster - Provision of valid and reliable information on
the economy to economic actors
25What can you expect from the dti?Customised
Services
- Developed in partnership will stakeholders in
high potential sectors cross-functional
programmes, initially for - clothing textiles
- agro-processing
- metals minerals
- tourism
- auto transport
- crafts
- chemical biotech
- knowledge-intensive services ICT
- For each sector, there will be a process of
analysis, strategy development and action - Also customised programmes for value matrix
enablers HRD, technology, infrastructure
logistics
26What can you expect from the dti?Broad-based
services
- Services to address more generic issues critical
to the development of the economy as a whole - Increased relevance, accessibility and efficiency
- In addition to high volume services provided,
will be specific programmes for - Market access
- Regulatory environment
- Investment
- Access to finance
- Policy coherence
27A challenge for all stakeholdersPartnerships
for growth development
- Necessary partnerships
- within government both vertically (national,
provincial, local) horizontally
(interdepartmental) their agencies - within the dti group of institutions
- between economic actors at all levels in the
economy - bringing in previously excluded voices
- Parliament
- knowledge networks
28A challenge for all stakeholdersPartnerships
for growth development
- Purpose of partnerships
- Developing a common economic vision
- Information sharing within and between
stakeholder groups developing a common
understanding of trends and drivers in the
economy - Building partnerships for strategy development
and action at all levels in the economy,
including wider stakeholder representation - Developing new ways of thinking and working
29Measuring our performance
- Developing our understanding of the key drivers
in the economy - Developing appropriate indicators to measure and
evaluate - efficiency
- outputs
- impact in relation to our objectives
- Benchmarking our relative performance and
competitiveness, and best-practice of other - DTI-equivalents
- Reviewing progress in partnership with
stakeholders
30The way forward
- Taking up the opportunity presented to us
- Moving from dialogue to collective action
- Securing the long-term sustainability of growth,
employment and equity in our economy