When manufacturing matters: a review of the (regional and local) state economic policies for a Gauteng global city region (2006-2011)
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Date
2015
Authors
Metileni, Moses Nzama Khaizen
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Abstract
The ‘global city’ (and the related concept of global city-regions) is presently hegemonic in South
Africa’s urban reconstruction discourse. It has come to constitute, especially for cities like
Johannesburg and its urban region of Gauteng, a prototypical image of city-ness; the ultimate
barometer for advanced development. This is so even as its origins can be traced to a small sample of
cities in the North (most prominently New York, and London), and its applicability to, relevance or
usefulness for cities in developing countries has been questioned. City Development Strategies
anchored on this discourse, and their related economic policies, promote an economic development
trajectory in which finance and services are the main drivers.
This research adopts the Kaldorian proposition that manufacturing is the sector better positioned to
drive economic growth and development. It argues that developing countries, and their cities and
urban regions, are riddled with the catch-up problem; which requires the deliberate reallocation of
resources from low-productivity diminishing returns activity sectors (e.g. agriculture and other
extractive activities) to higher productivity, increasing returns activity sectors (especially
manufacture). It argues that this change in the dynamics of production structures of these economies
will be brought about by technology capability building whose realisation might require a
developmental state that drives selective industrial policy. As such, neither a swift shift to finance and
services (which in most of developing country economy cases entails a degree of premature
deindustrialisation), nor mere clustering and agglomeration as envisaged in the global city and new
regionalism literature respectively suffices in such contexts.
Reviewing a select set of policy documents and strategies (of both the Gauteng Provincial
Government and of its three metropolitan municipalities) adopted between 2006 and 2011; the
research assesses how manufacturing is accounted for in the global city region agenda proposed for
the Gauteng urban region, and the implications of such for that region’s future economic trajectory. It
finds that at inception, the City Region Strategy was premised on an uncritical acceptance of
neoliberal globalisation as a given, necessitating the adoption of an entrepreneurial approach to
governance, and of finance and services as the most strategic sectors for connectivity and
competitiveness in the global economy. These assumptions continue to dominate thinking in later
years, despite the fact that manufacturing remains the most critical sector in international trade, output
and productivity growth, and gross domestic fixed investment. This even as reference is made to the
importance of manufacturing for the Gauteng economy, and interventions such as the automotive
industry development in areas like Tshwane are being rolled out.
Description
Thesis (M.Com. (Development Theory and Policy)--University of the Witwatersrand, Faculty of Commerce, Law and Management, School of Economic and Business Sciences, 2015