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El. knyga: Industries without Smokestacks: Industrialization in Africa Reconsidered

Edited by (Director, UNU-WIDER, Finland), Edited by (Senior Fellow, Global Economy and Development, The Brookings Institution, USA), Edited by (Country Director, International Growth Centre (London School of Economics and Oxford University, UK)

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By 2030 more than three quarters of the world's absolute poor are projected to live in Africa. Accelerating economic growth is key to rising incomes on the continent, and central to this challenge is establishing activities that are capable of employing large numbers of unskilled workers, that can raise productivity through innovation, and that can power growth through exports. Such structural transformation is a key driver of growth, and between 1950-1996 about half of the economic catch-up by developing countries (led by East Asia) was due to rising productivity in manufacturing combined with growing agricultural output. Africa, however, has lagged behind.

In 2014, the average share of manufacturing in GDP in sub-Saharan Africa hovered around 10 per cent, unchanged from the 1970s, leading some observers to be pessimistic about Africa's potential to catch the wave of sustained rapid growth and rising incomes. Industries Without Smokestacks: Industrialization in Africa Reconsidered challenges this view. It argues that other activities sharing the characteristics of manufacturing- including tourism, ICT, and other services as well as food processing and horticulture- are beginning to play a role analogous to that played by manufacturing in East Asia. This reflects not only changes in the global organization of industries since the early era of rapid East Asian growth, but also advantages unique to Africa. These 'industries without smokestacks' offer new opportunities for Africa to grow in coming decades.
List of Figures
ix
List of Tables
xi
List of Abbreviations
xiii
Notes on Contributors xv
1 Industries without Smokestacks and Structural Transformation in Africa: Overview
1(26)
Richard S. Newfarmer
John Page
Finn Tarp
2 New Technologies Create Opportunities
27(21)
Sally Murray
3 Telecommunication and ICT-Based Services Trade
48(20)
Cldudio R. Frischtak
4 Tourism Global Value Chains and Africa
68(22)
Jack Daly
Gary Gereffi
5 Agro-Processing and Horticultural Exports from Africa
90(23)
Emiko Fukase
Will Martin
6 Air Transport in Africa: A Portrait of Capacity and Competition in Various Market Segments
113(20)
Heinrich C. Bofinger
7 How Trucking Services Have Improved and May Contribute to Economic Development: The Case of East Africa
133(18)
Charles Kanaka
Gael Raballand
Mike Fitzmaurice
8 Trade in Services: Opening Markets to Create Opportunities
151(19)
Bernard Hoekman
9 Industries without Smokestacks: Implications for Ethiopia's Industrialization
170(21)
Mulu Gebreeyesus
10 The Agro-Processing Industry and its Potential for Structural Transformation of the Ghanaian Economy
191(22)
Nkechi S. Owoo
Monica P. Lambon-Quayefio
11 Prospects for Information and Communications Technology-Enabled Services in Kenya: The Case of the Mobile Money Transfer Industry
213(19)
Dianah Ngui
Peter Kimuyu
12 Industries without Smokestacks: Mozambique Country Case Study
232(22)
Antonio S. Cruz
Fausto J. Mafambissa
13 Senegal: A Service Economy in Need of an Export Boost
254(21)
E. Philip English
14 Understanding and Characterizing the Services Sector in South Africa: An Overview
275(21)
Haroon Bhorat
Christopher Rooney
Francois Steenkamp
15 Employment and Productivity Growth in Tanzania's Service Sector
296(20)
Mia Ellis
Margaret McMillan
Jed Silver
16 Rwanda: From Devastation to Services-First Transformation
316(25)
Kasim Munyegera Ggombe
Richard S. Newfarmer
17 Industries without Smokestacks in Uganda and Rwanda
341(23)
John Spray
Sebastian Wolf
18 Regional Opportunities in East Africa
364(23)
Stephen Karingi
Ottavia Pesce
Lily Sommer
19 Integration Along the Abuja Road Map: A Progress Report
387(24)
Jaime de Melo
Mariem Nouar
Jean-Marc Solleder
20 Widening the Options: Implications for Public Policy
411(22)
Richard S. Newfarmer
John Page
Finn Tarp
Index 433
Richard Newfarmer is Country Director for Rwanda and Uganda at the International Growth Centre (a joint venture of Oxford University and the London School of Economics). He a Member of the Advisory Board for the WTO Chairs Program, and consults with international organizations, including the World Bank, the OECD, and the International Trade Centre. He was the World Bank's Special Representative to the World Trade Organization, and served as a lead economist in Latin America, East Asia, and the research department. He has authored numerous articles and books on trade and foreign investment, recently co-authoring Trade in Zimbabwe, and Trade and Employment in a Fast Changing World for the OECD.

John Page is a Senior Fellow in the Global Economy and Development Program at the Brookings Institution and a Non-resident Senior Fellow of the UNU World Institute for Development Economics Research (UNU-WIDER). He is also visiting professor at the National Graduate Institute for Policy Studies, Tokyo, Japan and a Research Associate of the Centre for the Study of African Economies at Oxford University. From 1980 to 2008 he was at the World Bank where his senior positions included: Director, Poverty Reduction, Director, Economic Policy, and Chief Economist, Africa. He is the author of several books and more than 100 published papers on economic development.

Finn Tarp is Director of UNU-WIDER and Professor of Development Economics at the University of Copenhagen. He has some 38 years of experience in academic and applied development economics research, teaching and policy analysis; and his field experience covers more than 20 years of in-country assignments in 35 countries across the developing world, including many years of work in Viet Nam. Finn Tarp has published widely in leading international academic journals alongside a series of books, and he is a member of the World Bank Chief Economist's Council of Eminent Persons. He has been awarded Vietnamese Government Medals of Honour for 'Support to the Planning and Investment System' and the 'Cause of Science and Technology'.