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A FRAMEWORK FOR DESIGNING A STRATEGY FOR GROWTH AND DEVELOPMENT Professor Joseph Semboja Executive Director REPOA
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INTRODUCTION Importance of equitable growth is recognised for development; see Vision 2025, MKUKUTA, Mini-tiger plan,.. Current growth trends high but not adequate to achieve income poverty targets of Vision 2025 and the MDG Therefore, need to develop strategy for accelerating and sustaining growth
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OUTLINE OF THIS PRESENTATION 1.Makes the case ( gives “rationale”) for an overriding coherent strategy that provides direction for resource mobilization and concentration of efforts 2.Outlines criteria for identification of growth drivers 3.Discusses enabling support that may be needed in implementing the chosen strategy
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RATIONALE FOR A NEW STRATEGY Resources are limited; need to determine a clear direction for concentration of efforts; targeting activities and key actors for capacity building Need for : –alignment and consistency of different policies and strategies –Focus on interventions that show strong synergies between themselves; and signals to other actors –Focus on high pay-off policies and actions (scale, employment, poverty reduction)
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DEVELOPING A STRATEGY First requirement: an agreed development vision. Vision 2025 exists. Then, interpretation of the Vision –by linking available resources and markets to identify the country’s growth drivers Tanzania is part of the global environment, as a market and a production centre. Therefore growth drivers must be based on the country’s comparative/competitive advantages
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Determining Comparative and Competitive Advantage Comparative Advantage: ability to produce (domestically) and deliver (to markets-local and global) relatively cheaply; based on naturally available resources Competitive Advantage- not based on naturally available resources. Rather on elements of competitiveness such as productivity, quality, diversity and innovation that arise from accumulation of new and more sophisticated set of resources. This requires medium and long term development of capacity in a country.
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Implications In the short to medium term Tanzania may need to: –focus on comparative advantage, as we strive to develop areas of competitive advantage in the future –The country’s comparative advantage is derived from its natural resource base namely, from its strategic location (transport and logistics), geological (minerals) resources ecological (horticulture) conditions, and bio-diversity and landscape (tourism)
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Implications of Comparative Advantages Comparative advantage not derived from: Cheap labour- due to low productivity levels. Hence human resource can not be a source of comparative advantage Extensive agricultural land- agriculture is no longer driven by land and unskilled labour; rather by knowledge and innovation; a reminder that comparative advantage is a dynamic concept- can be gained and lost Manufacturing- has always been driven by knowledge and innovation
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Criteria for Selecting Growth Drivers Criteria (once areas of comparative advantage have been identified) include: –High pay-off in terms scale, job creation and poverty reduction –Strong synergies and complementarity (reinforcement) with each other and with the other sectors –Potential for developing competitive advantage in the medium term. Geographical location is a good example- short to medium term targets landlocked neighbours and links with other sectors; medium to long term linkage with the rest of the global market especially Asia and the Middle East
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Policy Implications May lead to concentration or clustering of investments in specific geographical areas.This is not bad for growth; large concentrated investments lead to high aggregate employment, income and spending; selective ‘growth pole’ policy is good for pro- poor growth as people follow opportunities The enabling policy environment needs to be more specific to address identified constraints to the chosen growth drivers; in addition to overall enabling environment, there may be need for selective protection or strategic choices of social services and investment (beyond basic provision) to reinforce the drivers of growth Sound analytical and technical inputs are needed to drive the development of a clear growth strategy; strong political signals in favour of an analytically driven growth agenda have to be given
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CONCLUDING REMARKS The presentation aims to initiate discussions: it proposes a framework not conclusions; more work needs to be done, especially in the selection of growth drivers The presentation recognises that all sectors of the economy matter for growth. However, there is a difference between growth drivers and complementary growth areas The choice of appropriate growth drivers is likely to shift the discussions away from ‘sector’-based to multi- sector based; away from short term to long term benefits Remember: comparative advantages can be gained and lost
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