Promotion of the Regional Economy in the Sri Lankan -
German Technical Co-operation
Rationale for PRE
Sri Lankan-German Technical Co-operation in the area
of regional economic development is presently concentrated in 4
Provinces with a particular focus on Kandy District of the Central
Province. It is based on the concept 'Promotion of the Regional Economy
(PRE)' which was developed by GTZ from the mid 1990s onwards. PRE is the
German contribution to a reform of Sri Lanka's national policy for
regional rural development. This reform emerged out of a critical debate
about the Integrated Rural Development Programme (IRDP) among policy
makers and donors. On the one hand, it was accepted that the IRDP had
played a leading role in the introduction of participatory planning and
implementation techniques, social mobilisation and rural infrastructure
in neglected remote rural areas. On the other hand, the programme's
impact on local and rural economies had remained low, isolated and not
sustainable. It had to be acknowledged that the improvement of rural
infrastructure alone, without professional economic support programmes
could not stimulate economic growth and employment. The various sectoral
project components like credit schemes, training or agricultural support
services had not generated the expected economic dynamics either. Taking
this into account, PRE initiated a re-orientation of rural development
promotion: In the past, promotional efforts had been addressing the poor
rural population directly, focusing on agriculture-centered initiatives
in marginal rural areas. Now, PRE placed emphasis on the development of
specific geographic regions with economic potential through the
encouragement of private sector-driven initiatives. In doing so, PRE
moved away from a traditional problem oriented to a more potential
oriented promotional approach. The conceptual re-orientation of Sri
Lankan-German Technical Co-operation has influenced a new market and
private sector oriented Sri Lankan national strategy for regional rural
development, the 'Regional Economic Advancement Programme (REAP)'.
One target group of PRE is still the poorer strata of
the rural population, i.e. families with low income moving gradually
away from agriculture and seeking employment in the non-agricultural
sector. However, according to PRE, the poor are not supported directly
any longer but they benefit indirectly through the evolution of a
dynamic, competitive micro, small and medium enterprise (MSME) sector.
More than 90% of the roughly 40,000 businesses registered in Kandy
District belong to this category. PRE creates jobs and income
opportunities by supporting MSMEs with high growth potential. The
objective is to induce economic development through the enhancement of
the performance and competitiveness of MSMEs.
Systemic approach
PRE is a systemic approach in two ways: On the one
hand, it combines interventions at policy, institutional and enterprise
level. This includes policy dialogue, policy advice to national and
regional decision makers, feeding back regional and project experiences
to national policy development, organisational development of
institutions, in particular, of providers of support services to
enterprises, creation of networks and provision of innovative business
development services to MSMEs. On the other hand, PRE integrates the
existing projects of German Technical Cooperation (TC) which operated in
different fields of intervention under one coherent and synergetic
alliance. The TC-projects in the Central Region harmonised their
strategies aiming at one common goal: the creation of sustainable and
productive income and employment opportunities. At present , four TC-projects
are based on the PRE-approach:
-
the Enterprise Service Systems Promotion (ESSP)
Project - Kandy,
-
the Enterprise Information Project (EIP),
-
the Rural Banking Innovations Project (RBIP),
-
the Fisheries Community Development and Resources
Management Project (FCDRMP).
Two more projects are closely associated:
-
the Sri Lankan-German CEFE Project (SLGCP),
-
the Promotion of Vocational Qualifications of
Women and Youth in Rural Areas Project (VTW).
Both projects are components of GTZ's Vocational
Training and Private Sector Programme.
While the ESSP addresses the aspects of organisational
development and institutional networking combined with cross-sectoral
issues such as the identification of regions or sectors/sub-sectors of
growth, the other projects concentrate on specific sectoral areas of
co-operation (business information, micro finance, technical and
vocational education and training, entrepreneurial training etc.) or on
specific economic sectors (fisheries communities).
Identification of regions and sectors of growth
One of the core principles of PRE is the concentration
on regions and sectors which promise to have a potential for economic
growth. The regions and sectors of growth are selected using regional
planning methods and criteria. This includes:
-
Identification of regional corridors or centres of
growth by assessing the resource base of the area including the
hinterland, the quality of the physical infrastructure, the position
within the intra-regional network of commodity and transport flows
and the potential for interfirm
co-operation and cluster-building.
-
Analysis of the identified areas with regard to
their entrepreneurial and development potentials and to the existing
structural problems.
-
Selection of economic sectors and
sub-sectors/trades on the basis of the following criteria:
-
number of enterprises operating in the sector or
sub-sector/trade
-
number of persons employed
-
traditional roots in the area or region - which
means existence of traditional skills - and contribution to the
development of the local economy (measured on the basis of license
fees paid)
-
use of local resources and value added to local
resources (value chains, supply
chains)
-
employment possibilities for young people and
women
-
potential to address growing markets with products
and services
-
positive or at least no negative environmental
effects.
Creation of networks and co-operation structures
Another important element of the PRE approach is the
creation of networks and of co-operation structures at different levels,
notably between:
-
institutions of the private and the public sector,
like regional chambers and provincial governments or universities,
-
institutions at national and regional level, like
national and regional chambers,
-
various providers of business
development services (BDS), like micro finance, business
information and/or business training,
-
providers of BDS and MSMEs,
-
MSMEs and large and corporate, even international
enterprises.
Such networks aim at the creation of
"win-win" alliances including enterprise clusters as well as
the creation of groups or associations to foster common interests like
trade organisations or chambers. In this context, the newly established
Business Information and Development Unit (BIDU) of the Chamber of
Commerce & Industries, Central Province (CCICP), plays a key role as
an initiative of various private and public stakeholders at the
provincial level. BIDU's tasks as the professional arm of the CCICP
comprise, among others, support for decision makers and planners in the
identification of promotional strategies and the exploration of
growth-oriented business opportunities.
Market oriented business
development services (BDS)
The identification and provision of BDS under PRE
follow some basic principles:
-
demand-orientation of the services offered;
-
development of markets for BDS which means that
clients pay for them and public subsidies are gradually reduced;
-
cost-efficient use of resources and economic
viability of services to ensure sustainability;
-
compatible and subsidiary services to avoid
duplication and overlapping;
-
initiation of public-private-partnerships.
The BDS supplied on this basis comprise:
-
CT-driven business information: information
services by national and regional chambers to be used by the MSMEs
for strategic business decisions. Particularly, this includes
business contacts, general economic information, the analysis of
sectoral statistics, trends and demand in specific sectors.
-
Financial
services: innovative financial products, especially provision of
credits with a minimum of administrative requirements and within
short time like the credit product 'people's fast' by the People's
Bank.
-
Business advisory services: advisory or
consultancy services of general nature (e.g., how to create a
business) or technical advice in specific sectors or branches, for
example, for the fisheries sector. Such advisory services include
technical issues, marketing, management and self-organisation
(development of self-help potentials).
-
Entrepreneurial training for the development of
entrepreneurial skills and knowledge for business start-ups, and for
the improvement of existing enterprises.
-
Vocational training for women and youth to meet
the demand for skilled labour of competitive private enterprises.
Cross-sectoral aspects: gender and environmental issues
Gender aspects are raised at policy level and in the
context of institutional development which are addressed by different
projects under PRE. The VTW in particular has made the sensitisation for
gender equality in the labour market one of their core activities at
political level. Gender considerations are also part of the selection
process of sectors and trades and training participants.
Sustainable management of the natural resource base is
a concern of PRE and is, therefore, also raised at policy level. Here,
PRE aims at a consideration of environmental aspects in the discussions
about policy and legal frameworks for the MSME sector. Environmental
issues also play a role in the type of support provided to MSMEs under
PRE. Among others, PRE-related consultancy services or trainings for
MSMEs include modules on clean, environment-friendly and resource-saving
production processes (PREMA).
In the FCDRMP, resource depletion concern in the marine fisheries sector
led to increased priority given to the private sector-driven inland
fisheries and the generation of alternative income generation activities
in fisheries communities.
Replicability of the PRE approach
In order to replicate PRE, it is necessary to learn
the lessons, gather the experiences and codify the PRE knowledge base.
PRE has come up with innovative methods, products and services which can
be implemented in other regions of Sri Lanka. The system approach
applying the concept of systemic competitiveness is becoming a trademark
of German intervention in the field of regional development. Sri Lankan-German
Technical Cooperation has started to enter into this replication process
and will apply PRE-knowledge in other regions in the future.
Integration of PRE into the Sri Lankan-German priority
area 'Economic Reform and Development of Market System'
From an administrative point of view, PRE at present
is still a cluster of various individual TC-projects. Although the
projects co-operate with each other to a high degree, they are
autonomous entities. It is suggested that PRE becomes the nucleus of the
future priority area of the Sri Lankan-German Development Co-operation,
'Economic Reform and Development of Market System'.
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