Electronic Theses and Dissertations (PhDs)
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Browsing Electronic Theses and Dissertations (PhDs) by Author "Pillay, Pundy"
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Item Complexities of the professionalisation process and ethics of community development in South Africa(University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, 2021) Ditlhake, Kefilwe Johanna; Pillay, PundyThis thesis examined the professionalisation process complexities and ethics of community development in South Africa. The purpose of this study was to examine the current move to professionalise the community development sector to explain professionalisation process complexities, the tensions, challenges, and the values of community development in South Africa. The quest for professionalisation calls for the standardisation of knowledge, certifications, the establishment of occupational membership associations, and a system of self-regulation for community development practitioners and community workers into a formalised profession and be committed to serving the public interest. The professionalisation process of the community development sector was explicitly acknowledged in the White Paper on Social Welfare in 1997. In October 2011, the national Department of Social Development (DSD) organised a three-day Inaugural Summit held at the Vulindlela Village in Coega, Eastern Cape, which paved the way for the professionalisation process, and consulted stakeholders within the community development sector to plan the professionalisation process in this field. This summit was the first step undertaken towards the professionalisation process. The national DSD was mandated to lead, oversee and coordinate the professionalisation of community development. The Steering Committee, the South African Council of Social Service Profession (SACSSP), and the Task Team to professionalise community development in the planning and implementation process. The study adopted multiple case study designs to explore and explain how the community development practitioners, social workers, and community development workers view the professionalisation process complexities and the values of community development. This case study research took place in Gauteng at the local, provincial, and national levels of government. The four cases underpinning the study include the practitioners from non-governmental organisations (NGO), community development workers (CDWs) from the Department of Cooperative Governance and Traditional Affairs (COGTA), the provincial and national Department of Social Development (DSD), and the higher education institutions (HEI). The case study analysis focused first on each case separately (within-case analysis), including the connection of each case to the phenomenon underpinning the study. Understanding each case (within-case analysis) was essential to understanding the case context. By adopting multiple case study research designs, contributions to existing research on community development and the professionalisation process are made. The research questions underpinning the phenomenon under study are answered by accumulating findings from all four cases (cross-case analysis findings). Interviews and secondary data analysis were used to collect data. The interviews are the primary data source, and documentary analysis was used to corroborate the findings of the interviews. Non-probability purposive sampling and theoretical sampling were employed in this study. The empirics consist of seventy-four interviews with community development workers, social workers, and community development practitioners. The data analysis process followed the constructivist grounded theory constant comparison iterative and coding process, including two cycles of initial and focused coding. The theoretical codes developed in the study represent the foundation of the theory developed. Given the plethora of research in this field of study, the constructivist grounded theory data analysis process was applicable in generating the nascent theory that suits the nature of this inquiry. This study found that the professionalisation process was motivated by the need for status recognition and that the process is evolving as state regulation. Professionalisation process complexities are connected to the complex context of the history of the multidisciplinary nature of community development practice, lack of engagement and broader consultative processes, the qualification versus the occupational wider set of professionalisation processes, a crisis of status recognition, professional identity issues, the unclear scope of practice, and a lack of regulatory framework. Against this backdrop, challenges, tensions, turf issues, and contestations are identified. Including the ethical issues of conflict of interest, professional misconduct, and malpractice are raised as the major challenge of the evolving profession of community development practice. A substantive theory developed in this study is inductively theorised from data and contributes to existing research on community development professional practice. Based on the study findings, recommendations for policy and practice and further research are suggestedItem Impact analysis of institutional quality on foreign direct investment inflows into the Southern African Development Community (SADC) region(University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, 2022) Malindini, Kholiswa; Pillay, PundyThe quality of governance has increasingly become a significant determinant of foreign direct investment inflows in recipient countries. Although extensive research has been conducted internationally to examine the role of institutional quality on foreign direct investment inflows, this concept has not been thoroughly interrogated in the Southern African Development Community (SADC) context. The region is poverty-stricken, unemployment rates are skyrocketing, economic growth is deteriorating, and the region only accounts for only one percent of global FDI. Thus, this study sought to examine three main objectives critically: first, the effect of institutional quality on foreign direct investment inflows into the SADC region; second, the influence of the financial development on the FDI-institutional quality nexus and thirdly, to assess whether countries’ income levels matter for attracting FDI inflows. FDI as a percentage of GDP was measured as a dependent variable, while institutional quality, financial development, natural resource availability, and GDP growth were the main explanatory variables. The study controlled for inflation rates, trade openness, and trade policy. An interaction term was generated to evaluate the effect of financial development on the FDI-institutional quality nexus in the SADC region. In order to achieve the research objectives, a mixed-methods approach was adopted, and a convergence research design was applied. Secondary data for other macroeconomic variables were drawn from the World Bank Development Indicators. In contrast, data for financial development were drawn from the International Monetary Fund’s Financial Development Index database, and data for governance indicators were drawn from the Worldwide Governance Indicators’ database. Primary data was collected through semi-structured interviews and survey questionnaires. Econometric models were developed to analyse panel data from 2011 – 2018 for 15 SADC member states to achieve the set objectives quantitatively. Specifically, the study adopted the Generalised System Methods of Moments (GMM) as the appropriate and efficient estimation technique for the analysis. Using a Pillar Integration Process, the data were integrated. The overall findings suggested that, while GDP growth, trade openness, and natural resources positively influence FDI inflows into the region and are statistically significant, institutional quality, inflation, trade policy and financial development are negatively and statistically significant coefficients towards FDI. The results revealed that a poor regulatory environment, the rule of law, and weak accountability are the main disincentives to improved quality of governance. The overall results indicated that weak institutional quality is still a significant challenge as far as inward FDI attraction is concerned; the lack of an enforcement mechanism directly impacts foreign investor property rights protection and eventually deters foreign investment inflows. Also, the unstable political framework that fails to sufficiently support economic institutions and ensure certainty, and the lack of political will, particularly by heads of government to implement and prioritize regional objectives over national interests, is a significant problem and stifles progress towards more profound integration. It also transpired that the financial markets and institutions within the region are not efficiently developed and are still fragmented, and this is attributed to macroeconomic instability and weak macroeconomic convergence. The findings also revealed that the countries’ income levels do not matter as far as FDI attraction is concerned. Based on these results, it may be necessary for SADC member states to adopt an institutional framework that promotes collaboration in the region and ensures effective and efficient implementation of the potential protocols. Given the dominance of national sovereignty over regional objectives, it may be worth examining the regimes that govern the member states; based on the view that sometimes non-compliance by member states emanates from the regime, which may sometimes not support regionalism. Convergent bilateral and multilateral arrangements are necessary for the region. The region needs to raise its export competitiveness by attracting domestic and foreign investments, and a rigorous trade integration process is a prerequisite. Policymakers in the region should focus on working together with institutions to promote development in the banking sector. Further, given the adverse effects of financial development on FDI inflows due to rising domestic credit by the banking sector, efforts should be made to maintain domestic credit levels to allow room for more FDItem Measuring the Fiscal Space for South Africa to Support Economic Growth and Development(University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, 2023) Motsepe, Dikgang; Pillay, PundyA number of developing and emerging market economies are faced with economic challenges that will require governments to access additional resources in order to invest in their economies. This thesis seeks to answer two research questions: 1) Should governments increase fiscal spending or government debt to finance the investment in the productive capacity of the economy in order to support and drive economic growth? and 2) Will an increase in government debt reduce investment and economic growth? Time series data of emerging market economies were used from the period 1994 – 2017 to answer the research questions. The key findings from the emerging market economies analysis confirm the positive relationship between government debt and economic growth across all the identified countries. The research findings indicate that in the identified emerging market economies, economic growth was high, showing an average growth of 5.0% when debt levels were below the 90% ratio. For debt levels above 90% of GDP, economic growth was significantly low, averaging 0.5%. The study’s findings indicate that the emerging market economies showed an average public sector investment to GDP ratio of 23.6% at debt levels below 90% of GDP. For debt above 90% of GDP, public sector investment to GDP was slightly lower, averaging 15.3%. The key findings with regard to measuring debt sustainability using the debt limit of 68% to 97% to GDP as calculated by Ganiko, Melgarejo and Montoro (2016), is that all the emerging market economies have significant room to increase their debt levels, with South Africa obtaining an average debt ratio of 41% for the study period. The findings from the emerging market economies support the themes in the literature review that government debt can influence economic growth through the total factor productivity channel. This will entail increased government investment in infrastructure development, industrial development, education, health and nutrition. The thesis acknowledges that increases in debt levels will increase interest rates, thus reducing the fiscal space available to government. The increase in interest rates calls for a more effective utilisation of monetary policy instead of fiscal policy via the reduction of interest rates and purchasing of zero interest rate government bonds. To achieve this, this study calls for the increased role of monetary policy to use interest rates to achieve debt sustainability and to support economic growth. The thesis provides the policy direction for both fiscal and monetary policy on how to increase the ‘fiscal space’ available to government to raise additional resources to support economic growth and development. The study’s contribution to knowledge is the call for a change to the orthodox paradigm and narrative that debt is bad for economic growth and to promote the policy direction of using debt and increased spending to get economies to full employment. The policy directive seeks to support the use of government debt to fund structural reforms, to recapitalise State-Owned Entities, to support industrial development as well as to promote infrastructure and human capital development, with the objective to support economic growth. The thesis argues that debt is not harmful if directed towards the productive side of the economy. The paradigm is embedded within the Keynesian approach which is supported by the new growth theory, functional finance and modern monetary theory on fiscal stimulus and how to finance it. The paradigm shift also talks to moving away from conventional monetary policy and recommends that central banks decrease interest rates, monetise government debt, and create sovereign money in order to support government debt sustainability. The paradigm shift also seeks to change the conventional policy direction of central banks of increasing money supply indirectly using the banking sector, to directly increase money supply through fiscal policy in order to support economic growth. This will give central banks the tool to direct and influence spending in the economy to meet the objectives of economic growth and job creation. As argued by various economists, this can be achieved through better policy coordination between monetary and fiscal policy, and improved institutional arrangements which will ensure that the creation of money is directed towards economic growth and job creation