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Principles for Local Economic Development: Options for
South Africa
Dr.
Jörg Meyer-Stamer
1 What is Local Economic Development (LED)?
Defining LED is no easy task. One way of trying it anyway is by
saying what it is not:
- LED is not industrial policy. It is also not identical with SMME
promotion (though the latter may be part of LED).
- LED is not regional planning. Planning can make an important
contribution to LED. But while there is often economic development
without anybody having planned for it, the process of planning does
not secure that there is subsequent economic dynamism.
- LED is not community development. Community development is about
solidarity – it is about self-help groups, mutual assistance and
voluntary work to help the disadvantaged and solve health,
education, housing and other problems. LED is about competitiveness
– it is about companies thriving in competitive markets and
locations thriving in a competitive, globalised world.
So what then is LED? Mostly, it is a process that involves a number
of projects. Let us first try to describe LED by giving a few examples
of typical LED projects:
- Different stakeholders from one sector, for instance tourism, come
together to discuss, formulate and propagate a joint image promotion
initiative for a location (e.g. municipality, district).
- Private business and council join forces to attract a foreign
company which processes the products manufactured by a major local
company.
- The council streamlines regulations and sets up an office which
assists businesses in understanding and complying with regulations
(e.g. how to obtain a permit, how to fill out forms, etc.).
- The local Business Chamber organises a scheme where experienced
businesspeople dedicate two hours per fortnight to coach emerging
entrepreneurs.
- Council and business associations organise an annual fair for
local products.
These examples lead us to a more analytical definition of LED: it is
about local activities to make markets work better. It is not about
distorting markets, and it is not about substituting them. LED aims at
remedying market failures such as barriers to entry, information
problems and high transaction costs. LED is based on projects like those
mentioned before. LED is not about projects such as helping three ladies
to raise chicken, or throwing a heap of money at a few people who want
to open a funeral parlour (without any prior experience in the sector),
or setting up hawker
stalls. LED is about creating favourable framework conditions for
business, not about running businesses. Running a business is the task
of risk-accepting entrepreneurs. The core idea of LED is to make the
risks involved in running a business calculable, and to make sure that
the market for business ideas can work properly.
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2 General Principles for LED
Yet another way of defining LED is by formulating a few guiding
principles:
- LED aims at creating favourable locational factors, i.e. qualities
which make your place a good place to do business. This includes
obvious elements such as improving the infrastructure and training
workers, but also less obvious elements such as the
business-mindedness and efficiency of local administration.
- LED aims at promoting business. This can be existing businesses,
start-ups or external companies coming into your location. You would
also look at linking things: promote and support spin-offs and
subcontracting, attract investors which fit nicely into the local
economic structure, and consider franchises as a source of new local
businesses. At the same time, LED must never create unfair
competition for existing businesses, in particular by subsidising
some companies to the detriment of others. It may often be justified
to support start-ups, even financially, but this must be based on a
clear understanding of barriers to entry (e.g. due to economies of
scale) and other types of market failure, and it must be clear that
this is a fixed-term support.
- LED aims at making local markets work better. It aims at creating
places and opportunities to match supply and demand, as well as to
discover, propagate and promote new business opportunities.
- LED aims at making better use of locally available resources.
Instead of complaining about the difficulties of finding adequate
advisors for the Local Business Service Centre, why not involve
experienced businesspeople and managers in coaching both
entrepreneurs and advisors?
It is important to note that LED involves very different target
groups. A multinational company that may invest in your location is as
much a target of LED activities as is the young black unemployed with
limited skills who have some entrepreneurial talent.
LED is about small and big things, and it includes everything from
very modest to very fancy activities. What all this must have in common
is business thinking. LED is not social work. The guiding principle of
LED is competitiveness. You want to make sure that your location has
qualities that are competitive with those of other locations, so that
companies choose your place rather than going elsewhere. And you want to
make sure that local markets work, so that manifold business
opportunities arise.
It is also important to note that LED is different from IDP. Whereas
the IDP tends to focus at needs, problems and bottlenecks, LED ought to
be driven by opportunities. IDP looks at long-term investment, whereas
LED can keep itself quite busy for a while by looking only at short-term
opportunities. IDP involves a long and intensive process of mobilising
communities, whereas LED can be based on the activities of only a
limited number of stakeholders. There is no need to form a consensus
about the details of LED; it is sufficient that local stakeholders agree
that there should be LED at all. An effort to form a consensus and to do
a detailed planning of LED tends to get stuck in endless discussions
with practical activities being launched.
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3 Options for South Africa
In the specific case of South Africa, it is notable that LED often is
understood in a very different way from elsewhere in the world:
- It is often confused with territorial planning (in particular as
Integrated Development Plans claimed to address, among other things,
LED).
- It is often entangled with community development, which tends to
lead to a situation where, due to conflicting rationales and goals,
neither social nor economic objectives are actually achieved.
- LED is often focusing primarily on black empowerment and the
promotion of emerging entrepreneurs.
- LED is supposed not to be “smokestack chasing”. This is
adequate to the extent that luring external investors merely by
offering subsidies is not a smart LED concept. However, it
encourages a mindset which neglects the opportunities created
through the attraction of external investors, thus forfeiting the
option to attract the type of investor which have created millions
of low-skilled jobs in Asia and Latin America.
In other words, LED in South Africa tends to be confused and highly
selective. Adding to this the limited capacity and experience local
governments tend to have in terms of promoting economic development, it
is unlikely that LED will make much of a difference. What might be the
principles of an adequate LED concept for South Africa?
- Establish a clear distinction between LED and community
development. LED is about creating functioning markets that
encourage competitive businesses.
- Community development is about solving social problems (health,
housing, education, neighbourhood), and it involves principles such
as solidarity and support for the weak and marginalised.
- Introduce a clear market and business focus in LED. Conceptualise
black empowerment and the promotion of emerging entrepreneurs from
this perspective. For instance, townships are full of business
opportunities, but also full of market failures. Addressing market
failure is the appropriate way to stimulate business opportunities,
not subsidising potential entrepreneurs or entertaining them with
shallow training courses. You don’t solve a problem by throwing
money at it.
- Realise the opportunities involved in the better utilisation of
local resources. Why not use the business skills of experienced
businesspersons to strengthen the capabilities of emerging
entrepreneurs? Why not look systematically for local sourcing
opportunities? Why not mobilise the locally available capital for
local business investment?
- Instead of encouraging the creation of oversized, ineffective LED
Fora, persuade local stakeholders to look for specific project ideas
that are quickly implementable and will make a difference for local
businesses. The idea that innovation can be based on consensus is
nonsense. With a huge LED Forum aiming at consensus, you get very
boring, conventional ideas, and probably no practical results at
all. Encourage local stakeholders to establish a governance
structure only when there is something to be governed, i.e. when
some practical projects are under way.
- Involve both the public and the private sector in LED. Don’t
leave LED to the private sector alone, since this may create too
narrow a perspective. But also don’t leave it to government alone,
since government is usually not very good at understanding business
matters. LED must be based on a partnership between government and
the private sector, and it should involve other stakeholders, which
are targeting economic issues.
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the case study as pdf (86 kb, 4pp.)
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