Towards alternative conceptions of local economic reform in the developing world: the case of South Africa
OUTPUT TYPE: Journal Article
PUBLICATION YEAR: 2004
TITLE AUTHOR(S): U.Pillay
KEYWORDS: ECONOMIC GROWTH RATE
Print: HSRC Library: shelf number 2878
HANDLE: 20.500.11910/7317
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11910/7317
If you would like to obtain a copy of this Research Output, please contact Hanlie Baudin at researchoutputs@hsrc.ac.za.
Abstract
Against a comprehensive critical review of the international literature over the past decade on cities and the global economy, this paper argues that in many of the cities in the developing world, in large part due to state incapacity to address local problems, there has been a flourishing of organisations in civil society to engage in self-help, build social networks and mutual support groups, and create other forms of associational life to meet basic services needs as well as generate economic growth. The paper posits that this raises the question, then, given the specific and often complex local contexts within which cities in the developing world operate, as to what actually constitutes appropriate mechanisms to stimulate local economic development (and initiate political reform) in these places, South Africa's town and cities included? Are public-private partnerships, urban growth coalitions, urban regimes, and other types of urban entrepreneurial ventures, most of which embrace privatistic and corporatist growth agendas, the most suitable institutional arrangements to effect local economic growth in the cities of Asia, Africa and Latin America? Or are new locally-based associational arrangements like forums, voluntary bodies representing a broad spectrum of social interests and seeking essentially to debate issues of importance to a metropolitan in a truly inclusive manner, moreably placed to address the issue of economic growth and generation, thereby reducing poverty, in these cities?-
Related Research Outputs:
- An analysis of the recent exporting trajectory of the South African clothing value chain: upgrading or downgrading? Research report no. 54
- State of the nation: South Africa 2003-2004
- The South Africans have arrived: post-apartheid corporate expansion into Africa
- A contradiction at the heart of ANC policy
- State of the nation: South Africa 2004-2005
- Foreword
- State of the nation: South Africa 2005-2006
- Foreword
- South Africa in Africa: scrambling for energy
- Economy: introduction
- Poverty trends and poverty reduction in South Africa
- The economic well-being of the family: households' access to resources in South Africa, 1995-2003
- Good times bad times: survey of economic perceptions and political attitudes
- Economic performance and development
- A fresh look at the global economic crisis: Africa's alternatives
- South Africa in Africa: annotated bibliography 1994-2008
- Understanding the effects of fiscal policy on South Africa
- Internalizing the externalities: accounting for the social costs of conventional energy generation in South Africa
- Cost benefit and qualitative analysis study: fieldwork report
- Do customers flee from HIV?: a survey of HIV stigma and its potential economic consequences on small businesses in Tshwane (Pretoria), South Africa