WIDER Working Paper 2019/38
This working paper, Motorcycle parts and aftermarket industry regional value chain in Southern Africa, forms part of the project: Southern Africa – Towards Inclusive Economic Development (SA-TIED)
Abstract
This paper provides an overview of the structure, key functions, and characteristics of the motorcycle parts and aftermarket industries in Southern Africa in order to identify challenges to and opportunities for growth in these industries. The research examines the end markets and utilization of motorcycles, the status of these markets, and demand for local or regional production processes. The paper also considers the main factors affecting the sales of motorcycles and their parts in the region and assesses whether a more coordinated approach between governments and foreign and local firms could lead to assembly and/or manufacturing value-added activity in the Southern African Development Community region.
Download Working Paper: https://www.wider.unu.edu/sites/default/files/Publications/Working-paper/PDF/wp-2019-38.pdf
TIPS acknowledges the support of the SA-TIED programme for this working paper, with special thanks to UNU-WIDER and the South African Department of Trade and Industry.
Business Day - 30 April 2019 by Neva Makgetla (TIPS Senior Economist)
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Business Day - 16 April 2019 by Neva Makgetla (TIPS Senior Economist)
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Business Day - 2 April 2019 by Neva Makgetla (TIPS Senior Economist)
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Business Day - 19 March 2019 by Neva Makgetla (TIPS Senior Economist)
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Business Day - 5 March 2019 by Neva Makgetla (TIPS Senior Economist)
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WIDER Working Paper 2019/26
This working paper, Black cat, white cat - lessons to be learned from ASEAN, forms part of the project: Southern Africa – Towards Inclusive Economic Development (SA-TIED)
Abstract
There is some consensus at present that SADC needs to re-imagine itself and breathe new life into its somewhat moribund structure. The European Union is often presented as the textbook example to be followed by other regional associations. The European Union is characterised by a rules-based, heavily bureaucratic and powerful supranational institutional structure to which individual nations have ceded sovereignty in several spheres (most notably the economy). The European Union has progressed in a highly linear and consecutive fashion from a free trade area to a customs union, to a single market and a common currency.
On the other end of the integration spectrum sits the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN). Based on Confucian values and culture, it emphasises harmony, group above individual, and pragmatism above rules. ASEAN is designed around principles and behaviour norms rather than rules; it is intergovernmental instead of supranational; it is more market driven than government driven; it has strong bottom up and extra-entity processes, decision-making is based on unanimity not majority; it is institutionally and bureaucratically lite; it embraces open regionalism with unclear rules for entry; and deepening integration is being achieved in an ad hoc, parallel fashion rather than a linear, consecutive fashion.
In this paper, some of the key elements of ASEAN and its operationalisation are considered, not as recommendations or a systematic alternative guide to reconsidering the conceptual basis of SADC’s regional integration efforts – but simply as potential catalysts for discussion and thinking about problems from a different perspective.
Download Working Paper: https://www.wider.unu.edu/sites/default/files/Publications/Working-paper/PDF/wp-2019-26.pdf
TIPS acknowledges the support of the SA-TIED programme for this working paper, with special thanks to UNU-WIDER and the South African Department of Trade and Industry.
Nigerian Institute of Advanced Legal Studies: Founders' Day Lecture Series - Guest lecture by Professor Faizel Ismail*
The Nigerian Institute of Advanced Legal Studies (NIALS) Founders’ Day is an annual event which provides a platform for scholarly discourse and the exhibition of legal scholarship of outstanding academics. Over the years, guest lecturers have examined contemporary issues such as intellectual property, the role of the International Criminal Court, human rights, and constitutional imperatives.
The 2019 Founders’ Day Lecture titled Inclusivity and the Transformational Potentials of the AFCFTA for African Countries explores the potentials of regional trade within the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA). The lecture provides a historical perspective of AfCFTA, discussing the roles and purposes of existing trade agreements such as the World Trade Organization (WTO) Agreement and the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT). The lecture interrogates the role of the AfCFTA and economic transformation and industrialisation in Africa, and provides insights into the inter-relationship between AfCFTA and effective democracy and good governance. The lecture also analyses the inextricable role of the private sector and stakeholders in pushing an all-inclusive process of negotiations arising from the AfCFTA agreements. It provides salient recommendations to African States, including the building of necessary institutions and development of a regulatory framework to ensure effective transition of the AfCFTA.
*Professor Ismail is the Director Designate of the Nelson Mandela School of Public Governance and Adjunct Professor at the Centre of Comparative Law in Africa (CCLA), University of Cape Town, and a TIPS Research Fellow
Green Economy Coaliation Blog: South Africa's natural capital challenge
For the full report, see Nature in South Africa’s Transition to Sustainability: A Stocktake.
Green Economy Coaliation Blog: Young, gifted and green in South Africa
This article has been drawn from a policy brief, Using the green economy and youth inclusion for sustainable development in South Africa.