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Partnerships in Local Economic Development 5 th National Annual Local Government Conference 11-12 August 2008 Presented by Gerry Delany

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Presentation on theme: "Partnerships in Local Economic Development 5 th National Annual Local Government Conference 11-12 August 2008 Presented by Gerry Delany"— Presentation transcript:

1 Partnerships in Local Economic Development 5 th National Annual Local Government Conference 11-12 August 2008 Presented by Gerry Delany gerry@delany.co.za

2 How important is LED? What do South Africans worry about most? - Poverty, crime, unemployment 13,2 million have work 7,4 million need work (4 m +3,4 m) Creating nearly half million jobs p a - but 200 000 new job seekers each year - only gaining 300 000 new jobs p a

3 What does that look like?

4 It’s important! Need to advance on many fronts Macro-economic policies fundamental National programmes important, but insufficient Globalisation changing the rules, the engines of growth are cities & regions Emphasis and resources shifting to local and regional development strategies

5 Emerging Trends (Gwen Swinburn) Traditional LED Subsidise FDI No legal frameworks Manufacturing & sector interventions Hard infrastructure Little economic info Public sector only Supply driven No inst mechanisms Sectoral Political boundaries Third Wave LED Biz environ, target potential Enabling legal frameworks Agric, manufacturing & service -> clusters Soft infrastructure Evidenced based stratplans Partnerships Demand driven Supportive inst mechanisms Territorial Economic space

6 Ways to grow an economy Create new enterprises Attract investment from outside Grow existing businesses Which gets the most attention?

7 Attract 10-20% Create 15-25% Retain and expand 60-80% Which should get most attention? Sources of new jobs

8 A balanced LED Strategy Needs three legs… and a firm foundation

9 Balanced LED Strategy Three legs: Retain and grow existing businesses Create new enterprises Attract investment from outside A firm foundation by investing in: Hard (physical) and soft (economic) infrastructure

10 10 Guiding principles (Swinburn & Yatta, Africities 2006) Strategically planned Territorial approach Locally owned, designed and delivered Partnerships both for design and implementation Reinforced by integrated government action Focus on conducive local business environment Integrated multi-sector initiatives Invest in hard, soft & institutional infrastructure Growth & retention of local businesses & people Projects by all - public, private, non-government

11 From planning to action Economic planning options - economic development department - across all departments - consultants - task team Who needs to take part? Partnerships for design & implementation - Relevant data they believe and understand - Consensus on what to do - Partners can then do what they do best

12 Pinetown BR&E Task Team

13 Typical BR&E findings Crime Run down unattractive environment Rising transport costs - businesses want to relocate Few local suppliers - especially IT, business services, stationary Need skills - sales/customer, technical, business No/defunct business organisation Services, traffic problems - “municipality unresponsive”

14 South Durban Basin action teams

15 Top 10 FDI location factors 1. Access to customers 77% 2. Social & political stability 64% 3. Ease of doing business 54% 4. Reliable infrastructure & utilities 50% 5. Availability of professionals 39% 6. Availability of managers 38% 7. Level of corruption 36% 8. Cost of labour 33% 9. Crime & safety 33% 10. Availability of skilled labour 32% Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency (MIGA)

16 Exclusion Social - bridge gaps between groups Spatial - infrastructure, leverage outside resources Economic - connecting to markets - access to cheaper inputs - education and skills development - supporting intitutions Not just LED but a national priority also Jörg Meyer-Stamer

17 Inkumane

18 Serious about LED Understand importance – set targets Get relevant information – together Partnerships/teams for design & implementation Balanced strategy Address exclusion

19 Development ultimately is not a matter of GNP or money or physical capital or foreign exchange, but of the capacity of a society to tap the root of popular creativity, to free up and empower people to exercise their intelligence and their individual and collective efforts to achieve a better life. Kari Levitt Professor Emeritus, McGill University


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