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Is the Southern African Development Community (SADC) afflicted by premature deindustrialisation?

Authors :
DESAI, PRANISH
HARVEY, ROSS
Source :
Africa Governance Papers Journal; Oct2023, Vol. 1 Issue 4, p74-95, 22p
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

A key driver of growing youth unemployment across African economies was identified by Rodrik (2016) as “premature deindustrialisation”, where developing countries move out of labour-absorptive, low-income manufacturing and into low value-added services sooner than their industrialised counterparts did so historically. Developing countries also make this transition at lower rates of per capita income than their wealthier peers. Manufacturing has, traditionally, been the primary channel through which employment growth has occurred, creating a sustained middle class, which in turn strengthens the political equilibrium (Acemoglu et al., 2019). A preliminary descriptive analysis of manufacturing performance in Africa reveals starkly divergent trajectories between SADC and non- SADC countries. SADC’s output and employment growth as a measure of manufacturing performance is worse than that of non-SADC countries in Africa. This paper quantitatively examines whether SADC is an outlier, controlling for intervening variables. Specifically, we employ econometric modelling with a focus on introducing decade-region interaction effects to ascertain whether SADC suffers a statistically significant difference in industrialisation trends when compared with countries in the rest of Africa. We account for this discrepancy by referring to the weak performance of SADC’s dominant economy, South Africa, and further consider whether the industrialisation prospects of other SADC countries are adversely impacted by a relatively strong reliance on oil and mineral rents. Finally, we propose some adjustments to the current SADC Industrialisation Strategy (2015-2063). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
Volume :
1
Issue :
4
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Africa Governance Papers Journal
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
175407096