Industrialization in Sub-Saharan Africa

Page 141

Industrializing across Global Value Chains   113

BOX 4.2

COVID-19 (Coronavirus) and Potential Disruptions to Global Value Chains The impact of COVID-19 (coronavirus) on the manufacturing sector is expected to be significant in the short run, given that the share of trade in the national income of most economies in the region is relatively large. The impact of disruptions in global value chains (GVCs) driven by the global demand slump would predominantly occur in countries with strong forward GVC links—mainly exporting raw materials used in other countries for production for export. Raw material exports account for the largest share of the region’s trade and GVC integration. In addition, supply shocks introduce direct supply disruptions in African countries that are increasingly becoming more integrated into GVCs. Non-resource-rich Sub-Saharan African countries that have been centers of robust growth in the region over the past two decades will be the most affected by these supply shocks. The largest declines in trade are likely to be in sectors with highly integrated GVCs. African economies that have recently been integrating or are well integrated into manufacturing GVCs, including Eswatini, Ethiopia, Kenya, Lesotho, and South Africa, will be affected the most in the immediate short run. For example, the garment industry, a budding manufacturing subsector in the region accounting for a large share of the sector’s employment and exports, is hard hit by worldwide retail closures and furloughs coupled with the collapse in consumer confidence. In the long run, the combination of trade-policy shocksa and the enduring public health concerns from COVID-19 have created uncertainty about the future of international trade, resulting in a rethinking of GVCs in manufacturing. Because of COVID-19 and emerging geopolitical trends in advanced economies, there is a growing preference for resilience or a “de-risking” strategy. COVID-19 is expected to reinforce an already ongoing change in GVCs with respect to geographic rebalancing (Kassa 2020). It has been estimated that between 16 and 26 percent of global exports would move to different countries between 2020 and 2025 (McKinsey Global Institute 2020). The change in heavily traded labor-intensive manufacturing GVCs, where many African countries’ comparative advantages lie, is expected to be significant. Textiles and apparel GVCs are expected to feature the highest share of trade that shifts to other countries.b This shift in GVCs is expected to create opportunities for developing economies. For example, Bangladesh and Vietnam have been, and are expected to continue to be, the main beneficiaries of the most recent shift. With the right policy mix and active industrial policies, African countries could present a viable alternative for some of these investments, based on their comparative advantages. African countries with relatively higher backward links in manufacturing GVCs may need to reposition themselves to reap any gains that may arise from fundamental changes in GVCs caused by global shocks, including the COVID-19 pandemic. a. These shocks include rising protectionism in advanced economies, China-US trade tensions, and Brexit. b. McKinsey Global Institute (2020) estimates that, relative to all other value chains, textiles and apparel features the highest share of trade that could most likely shift (36 to 57 percent in apparel and 23 to 45 percent in textiles), representing a range of $67 billion to $393 billion in value.


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References

7min
pages 199-203

Notes

1min
page 198

6.7 Policy Framework: Integrate, Compete, Upgrade, and Enable

2min
page 197

Policy Framework: Integrate, Compete, Upgrade, and Enable

1min
page 196

Policy in Ethiopia

2min
page 194

6.2 Women in Manufacturing Jobs: The Role of Industrial Policy

4min
pages 191-192

Education and Skills Enhancement

3min
pages 189-190

Opportunity Act, Everything But Arms, and the Generalized System of Preferences

2min
page 177

Competition Policy

4min
pages 187-188

Infrastructure Development

1min
page 185

Trade Policy

1min
page 176

Industry Employment Shares

3min
pages 169-170

Role of Industrial Upgrading in Jobs Growth in Manufacturing in Sub-Saharan Africa

6min
pages 160-162

Sub-Saharan Africa and Benchmark Countries

1min
page 163

Countries, 2014

3min
pages 153-154

Current Trends in Job Growth in Sub-Saharan Africa across GVCs

2min
page 152

4.2 COVID-19 and Potential Disruptions to Global Value Chains

2min
page 141

Conclusion and Policy Options

3min
pages 139-140

Annex 4A Gravity Model of Global Value Chain Participation

3min
pages 142-143

Neighbor South Africa

1min
page 138

Africa Sold as Intermediate Inputs, 2015

1min
page 135

Evolution of Sourcing Patterns for Intermediate Inputs among Manufacturing Firms

1min
page 130

Metals Exporters

3min
pages 128-129

4.1 Country Groups and Comparators

2min
page 122

Resource Endowment and Participation in Manufacturing GVCs

6min
pages 123-127

Global Value Chains: Definition and Measures

2min
page 118

References

9min
pages 112-117

Conclusion and Policy Options

3min
pages 106-107

Notes

3min
pages 110-111

Annex 3A Productivity Growth Decomposition

3min
pages 108-109

Physical Infrastructure and Productivity

2min
page 105

Market Structure, Entry Regulation, and Productivity

2min
page 104

Sources of Productivity Growth: Within-Firm Productivity Growth, Innovation, and Technology Adoption

8min
pages 100-103

Sources of Productivity Growth: Interindustry and Intraindustry Resource Reallocation

5min
pages 97-99

Jobs Growth at the Intensive Margin with Productivity as the Driver

1min
page 96

References

4min
pages 93-95

Notes

4min
pages 91-92

Conclusion and Policy Options

2min
page 90

Underlying Factors and Policy Interventions

5min
pages 87-89

The Case of Ethiopia

5min
pages 78-81

Note

1min
page 67

The Future of Industrialization in Africa

4min
pages 60-61

Rethinking Industrial Policy for Africa

4min
pages 62-63

A Policy Framework for Industrializing along Global Value Chains: Integrate, Compete, Upgrade, Enable

6min
pages 44-46

Key Messages

2min
page 31

References

2min
pages 68-70

Sustainable Growth and Structural Transformation in Africa

2min
page 52

1 Establishment Age Effects on Job Growth across Size Groups

2min
page 30
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