Inner City Gazette

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Grade R -11 Metropolitan College 170 Pritchard Street Tel – 011 402 9502

Est 2009 Issue 15 - 2021

Tel : 011 616 1523 Inner-City Gazette

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27 May - 10 June 2021

Website : www.inner-city-gazette.co.za 072 824 3014

Inner City Gazette

Intracontinental trade to boost employment “Industrialists and government should collaborate to create a framework for growth. This is a strong lesson we can learn from the successes in China and other Asian countries. We can make the ‘made in Africa’ brand synonymous with quality, innovation and unique products.”

KAS Africa CEO Vinny Perumal

Johannesburg - Africa has the opportunity to follow in the footsteps of Asia’s manufacturing giants over the next decade, using industrialisation to uplift millions of people from poverty and create jobs for its young population, and reinvent itself as the world’s next production powerhouse, according to KAS Africa CEO Vinny Perumal. She says the manufacturing sector holds the key to unlocking the economic potential of South Africa and the wider continent, with the continent’s young population emerging as an asset in a changing world. “According to the International Labour Organisation (ILO), over one in five African young people were not in employment, education or training in 2019. Furthermore, half of the countries among the top 10 for the highest rates of youth unemployment are in Africa, with South Africa topping the list. This is a humanitarian crisis. Yet, at the same time, Africa’s youthful population offers the continent potential to become an industrial powerhouse at a time dynamics in global manufacturing are changing. South Africa and other African countries should seize the opportunity to use manufacturing to reduce poverty and expand the middle class,” she says. Perumal says nearly every country in the world that has grown into

a prosperous nation has done so through industrialisation. Over the past 20 years, China’s growth on the back of low-cost manufacturing for export has not only transformed the country, but also played a major role in growing global wealth. Today, China is no longer known only as a low-cost manufacturing hub, but also as a leader in the fourth industrial revolution. Now, as China moves towards more high-tech and less labour-intensive manufacturing, Africa’s domestic markets grow, and companies look to build more resilient global value chains, there is an enormous growth opportunity for Africa. Seizing it could transform the face of the continent’s economy. By some estimates, every 100 jobs created in a factory will help create 160 service or supporting jobs. Perumal says some researchers and economists are already reporting the first signs of a manufacturing revolution in Africa. “One estimate shows a bounceback after the de-industrialisation of the 1980s to the early 2000s, with manufacturing production in Africa more than doubling from $73 billion to $157 billion between 2005 and 2014. Among the factors that may explain this include better governance in many parts of the continent, more

business-friendly policy, and the rise of smaller factories making goods to meet the demands of an emerging middle class. The challenge is now to scale these developments and grow intra-Africa trade and exports,” she explains. While it is unwise to generalise about a continent of 54 diverse countries, Perumal notes many reasons to be optimistic about manufacturing across most major African economies. She says the African Continental Free Trade Area (ACFTA) and Africa’s close ties with the BRICS countries are creating new export markets. The potential for more intracontinental trade is particularly important because it will help African manufacturers achieve real economies of scale; something that was always challenging when export major markets were far away. Business-to-business spending in manufacturing in Africa is forecast to top $666 billion by 2030, more than a third more than in 2015. Another reason for optimism is the focus that African governments are putting on industrial strategy and localisation of production. This could be key in rebuilding capacity in areas such as consumer goods, clothing and textiles, and agri-processing, where many African countries have become

dependent on imports. Nonetheless, there are still barriers to industrialisation. Governments will need to focus on building infrastructure, particularly road, rail and power, to create hospitable conditions for manufacturing. They will also need to invest in education and skills development, particularly STEM (science, technology, engineering and mathematics), to keep up with the high-tech nature of modern manufacturing. Perumal says these are challenges that will require a spirit of genuine public-private partnership. “Industrialists and the government should collaborate to create a framework for growth. This is a strong lesson we can learn from the successes in China and other Asian countries. We can make the ‘made in Africa’ brand synonymous with quality, innovation and unique products,” she says. She adds that African manufacturers have shown their mettle during the Covid-19 crisis, which has also displayed the importance of resilient supply chains. “We have the opportunity to reinvent Africa’s manufacturing sector and turn it into a major global player, in so doing helping to drive socioeconomic development across the African continent,” says Perumal.


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