The political economy of industrial policy in post-apartheid South Africa: a comparative case study analysis of Brazil and South Korea
- Modisaotsile, Botlhale Phurulla
- Authors: Modisaotsile, Botlhale Phurulla
- Date: 2023-10-13
- Subjects: Industrial policy South Africa , South Africa Economic conditions 1991- , Korea (South) Economic conditions , Brazil Economic conditions , Apartheid South Africa , Political economy , Deindustrialization
- Language: English
- Type: Academic theses , Master's theses , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/419703 , vital:71668
- Description: South Africa is a country that has experienced premature deindustrialisation due to its inability to move out of middle-income status. The role of industrial policy in South Africa is pivotal to taking the country to greater economic heights and a higher-income status. South Africa’s historical context indicates that the country experienced its highest GDP growth rates during the apartheid economy. Since the demise of apartheid, the post-apartheid economy has experienced poverty and economic inequality that the South African government cannot eradicate. This thesis addresses the failure of South Africa to overcome premature deindustrialisation, and it discusses the state of the political economy and economic growth in a pre-apartheid and post-apartheid context. The thesis also addressed the significance of industrial policy through the establishment of the Industrial Policy Action Plan (IPAP). The shortcomings and successes of IPAP form a critical part of the research and present an analysis of different economic sectors. This thesis also assesses the state of industrial policy using two countries as case studies: Brazil and South Korea. , Thesis (MEcon) -- Faculty of Commerce, Economics and Economic History, 2023
- Full Text:
- Authors: Modisaotsile, Botlhale Phurulla
- Date: 2023-10-13
- Subjects: Industrial policy South Africa , South Africa Economic conditions 1991- , Korea (South) Economic conditions , Brazil Economic conditions , Apartheid South Africa , Political economy , Deindustrialization
- Language: English
- Type: Academic theses , Master's theses , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/419703 , vital:71668
- Description: South Africa is a country that has experienced premature deindustrialisation due to its inability to move out of middle-income status. The role of industrial policy in South Africa is pivotal to taking the country to greater economic heights and a higher-income status. South Africa’s historical context indicates that the country experienced its highest GDP growth rates during the apartheid economy. Since the demise of apartheid, the post-apartheid economy has experienced poverty and economic inequality that the South African government cannot eradicate. This thesis addresses the failure of South Africa to overcome premature deindustrialisation, and it discusses the state of the political economy and economic growth in a pre-apartheid and post-apartheid context. The thesis also addressed the significance of industrial policy through the establishment of the Industrial Policy Action Plan (IPAP). The shortcomings and successes of IPAP form a critical part of the research and present an analysis of different economic sectors. This thesis also assesses the state of industrial policy using two countries as case studies: Brazil and South Korea. , Thesis (MEcon) -- Faculty of Commerce, Economics and Economic History, 2023
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Igniting a revolution at point zero? Exploring the barriers to early learning access in South Africa and the possibility of the social economy : a comparative analysis and study of Smartstart
- Authors: McCann, Claire Mary
- Date: 2022-10-14
- Subjects: Early childhood education South Africa , Social economy South Africa , Smart Start , Education and state South Africa , Social democracy , Dual economy South Africa , South Africa Economic conditions 1991-
- Language: English
- Type: Academic theses , Master's theses , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/403080 , vital:69920
- Description: Economic theory suggests that the greatest return to education investment is in the earliest years; early learning and childcare may enhance skill accumulation and mothers’ labour market choices. These services may be catalytic, igniting a revolution at point zero that transforms family outcomes and aids development. In South Africa, however, early learning deficits persist. This thesis explores barriers to quality early learning access and the possibility social economy initiatives offer, focusing on social franchises like SmartStart. Document analysis, comparative analysis, and interviews with SmartStart leaders suggest two key barriers. Firstly, where private firms are dominant and ability to pay for services is limited, low-income areas are under-served. For this reason, Polanyi claims that markets should be embedded in institutions. A post-Polanyian approach emphasises the role of social investment states, which focus spending on education and where social protection scaffolds markets, in this regard. The South African state seems to embrace this approach as ECD policy frames early learning as a public good and social investment. However, a second barrier is that an insulated state enables technocratic over democratic embeddedness, with powerful rights-based discourse but poor implementation. In particular, it seems that the state lacks a framework to progressively realise the right to quality early learning. Attempts to enforce high standards are not accompanied by sufficient resources, capacity or collaboration, resulting in sub-standard services and barriers to entry. Even in better resourced contexts (e.g., Basic Education), top-down, technocratic models (re)produce failing systems, where those with means exit in favour of market alternatives. An exploration of other developing countries suggests that this failure, with variations, prevails, but also that possibility exists. In these contexts, states seem more coordinated and responsive when partnering with civil society. In South Africa, the SmartStart model is based on partnership. SmartStart frames itself as a delivery platform, building relationships with local NGOs to simultaneously scale and deepen early learning. Partnerships with communities are crucial, to build demand in a sector whose association with social reproduction means that its economic significance may be overlooked. In addition, SmartStart puts forward a child-centred approach based on a prefigurative vision but also responsive to the realities of under-resourced contexts, aiming to progressively realise rights. Though with some limitations, SmartStart’s least-cost innovation for scale provides lessons for the state. As the state’s ECD mandate shifts to Basic Education, these findings serve to inform a more effective implementation model, leveraging resources that already exist. , Thesis (MEcon) -- Faculty of Commerce, Economics and Economic History, 2022
- Full Text:
- Authors: McCann, Claire Mary
- Date: 2022-10-14
- Subjects: Early childhood education South Africa , Social economy South Africa , Smart Start , Education and state South Africa , Social democracy , Dual economy South Africa , South Africa Economic conditions 1991-
- Language: English
- Type: Academic theses , Master's theses , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/403080 , vital:69920
- Description: Economic theory suggests that the greatest return to education investment is in the earliest years; early learning and childcare may enhance skill accumulation and mothers’ labour market choices. These services may be catalytic, igniting a revolution at point zero that transforms family outcomes and aids development. In South Africa, however, early learning deficits persist. This thesis explores barriers to quality early learning access and the possibility social economy initiatives offer, focusing on social franchises like SmartStart. Document analysis, comparative analysis, and interviews with SmartStart leaders suggest two key barriers. Firstly, where private firms are dominant and ability to pay for services is limited, low-income areas are under-served. For this reason, Polanyi claims that markets should be embedded in institutions. A post-Polanyian approach emphasises the role of social investment states, which focus spending on education and where social protection scaffolds markets, in this regard. The South African state seems to embrace this approach as ECD policy frames early learning as a public good and social investment. However, a second barrier is that an insulated state enables technocratic over democratic embeddedness, with powerful rights-based discourse but poor implementation. In particular, it seems that the state lacks a framework to progressively realise the right to quality early learning. Attempts to enforce high standards are not accompanied by sufficient resources, capacity or collaboration, resulting in sub-standard services and barriers to entry. Even in better resourced contexts (e.g., Basic Education), top-down, technocratic models (re)produce failing systems, where those with means exit in favour of market alternatives. An exploration of other developing countries suggests that this failure, with variations, prevails, but also that possibility exists. In these contexts, states seem more coordinated and responsive when partnering with civil society. In South Africa, the SmartStart model is based on partnership. SmartStart frames itself as a delivery platform, building relationships with local NGOs to simultaneously scale and deepen early learning. Partnerships with communities are crucial, to build demand in a sector whose association with social reproduction means that its economic significance may be overlooked. In addition, SmartStart puts forward a child-centred approach based on a prefigurative vision but also responsive to the realities of under-resourced contexts, aiming to progressively realise rights. Though with some limitations, SmartStart’s least-cost innovation for scale provides lessons for the state. As the state’s ECD mandate shifts to Basic Education, these findings serve to inform a more effective implementation model, leveraging resources that already exist. , Thesis (MEcon) -- Faculty of Commerce, Economics and Economic History, 2022
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The trade and poverty nexus in South Africa: investigating the transmission mechanism and the associated challenges
- Authors: Bhebhe, Nonceba Fikile
- Date: 2022-10-14
- Subjects: Commerce , Free trade , International trade , Poverty South Africa , Poverty Prevention , South Africa Economic conditions 1991-
- Language: English
- Type: Academic theses , Master's theses , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/357515 , vital:64750
- Description: International trade plays an essential role in economic development strategies. In literature, foreign trade is identified as a driver of economic growth. In recent times there has been an expansion in the scope of investigations around the role of international trade to include its links with poverty alleviation. Poverty alleviation is explicitly identified as the first goal on the 2030 agenda for sustainable development under the Sustainable Development Goals and implicitly defined in goal 10. International trade is seen as the engine behind achieving the goal. South Africa records excessive poverty and inequality levels by international standards for a middle-income country. The most recent Poverty Trends Report for 2006 - 2015 reports 55.5% of the population living in poverty. Inequality statistics reported a per capita expenditure Gini coefficient of 0.65 in 2015, evidence that the country has high levels of inequality. The country's severe poverty, unemployment, and inequality prompt policymakers to formulate developmental policies around the underlying structural challenges. Trade openness has increased since the end of the Apartheid era. Despite the increased trade openness, economic growth has been insufficient in reducing the high unemployment and poverty levels, presenting a challenge for economists, who argue that trade openness is pro-growth and pro-poor. In the South African case, the lack of change in the structural challenges of poverty, unemployment and inequality has raised concerns over whether the trade policy reforms made since 1994 interfere with development objectives. This study aims to investigate the impact of trade liberalisation on poverty, using the three channels, namely enterprise, distribution, and government that have been researched within the McCulloch, Winters and Cirera framework. Specifically, it investigates the linkages via the transmission mechanism in which trade affects poverty in South Africa by mapping the transmission mechanisms from trade liberalisation to poverty alleviation, whilst identifying the possible challenges to the transmission mechanisms and lastly, analysing the stylised facts around trade and poverty in South Africa. To answer the question of this study, quantitative data from National Income Dynamic Study (NIDS) was merged longitudinally and aggregated with the industry tariff data sourced from the World Trade Organisation (WTO) and United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD) statistics. A path analysis was undertaken to map the transmission mechanism, whilst descriptive statistics were used to identify the possible associated challenges. The results show that the most significant channel of transmission are the enterprise and distribution channel. However, the effects are of a small margin and a more comprehensive trade policy yield a higher margin of poverty alleviation. , Thesis (MCom) -- Faculty of Commerce, Economics and Economic History, 2022
- Full Text:
- Authors: Bhebhe, Nonceba Fikile
- Date: 2022-10-14
- Subjects: Commerce , Free trade , International trade , Poverty South Africa , Poverty Prevention , South Africa Economic conditions 1991-
- Language: English
- Type: Academic theses , Master's theses , text
- Identifier: http://hdl.handle.net/10962/357515 , vital:64750
- Description: International trade plays an essential role in economic development strategies. In literature, foreign trade is identified as a driver of economic growth. In recent times there has been an expansion in the scope of investigations around the role of international trade to include its links with poverty alleviation. Poverty alleviation is explicitly identified as the first goal on the 2030 agenda for sustainable development under the Sustainable Development Goals and implicitly defined in goal 10. International trade is seen as the engine behind achieving the goal. South Africa records excessive poverty and inequality levels by international standards for a middle-income country. The most recent Poverty Trends Report for 2006 - 2015 reports 55.5% of the population living in poverty. Inequality statistics reported a per capita expenditure Gini coefficient of 0.65 in 2015, evidence that the country has high levels of inequality. The country's severe poverty, unemployment, and inequality prompt policymakers to formulate developmental policies around the underlying structural challenges. Trade openness has increased since the end of the Apartheid era. Despite the increased trade openness, economic growth has been insufficient in reducing the high unemployment and poverty levels, presenting a challenge for economists, who argue that trade openness is pro-growth and pro-poor. In the South African case, the lack of change in the structural challenges of poverty, unemployment and inequality has raised concerns over whether the trade policy reforms made since 1994 interfere with development objectives. This study aims to investigate the impact of trade liberalisation on poverty, using the three channels, namely enterprise, distribution, and government that have been researched within the McCulloch, Winters and Cirera framework. Specifically, it investigates the linkages via the transmission mechanism in which trade affects poverty in South Africa by mapping the transmission mechanisms from trade liberalisation to poverty alleviation, whilst identifying the possible challenges to the transmission mechanisms and lastly, analysing the stylised facts around trade and poverty in South Africa. To answer the question of this study, quantitative data from National Income Dynamic Study (NIDS) was merged longitudinally and aggregated with the industry tariff data sourced from the World Trade Organisation (WTO) and United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD) statistics. A path analysis was undertaken to map the transmission mechanism, whilst descriptive statistics were used to identify the possible associated challenges. The results show that the most significant channel of transmission are the enterprise and distribution channel. However, the effects are of a small margin and a more comprehensive trade policy yield a higher margin of poverty alleviation. , Thesis (MCom) -- Faculty of Commerce, Economics and Economic History, 2022
- Full Text:
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