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Imperatives of alignment

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Title: Imperatives of alignment


1
Imperatives of alignment
  • iKapa Elihlumayo Growing Sharing the Cape
  • Preparatory Premiers Intergovernmental Forum
  • Spier Conference Centre
  • 1 June 2005

2
Overview
  • Manifestations of weak alignment
  • Development challenges of the Cape
  • National Imperatives for alignment
  • Tools and institutions for alignment
  • Priorities for moving forward

3
Evidence of weak alignment
  • Contradictory and divergent development policies
    and plans within and between municipalities
  • Unstrategic competition to attract inward
    investment
  • Disconnect between local development plans and
    regional economic and environmental systems
  • Limited information and knowledge sharing on
    effective service delivery and management of
    growing demands
  • Inability to achieve triple bottom-line outcomes
  • Political tensions that arise from the lack of
    synergy between municipalities and spheres of
    government

4
Consequences of weak alignment
  • Moderate economic growth (and decline in some
    areas)
  • Limited job creation (and job shedding in some
    areas)
  • Limited to zero impact on the second economy
  • Unsustainable development policies and practices
  • Growing services backlog
  • Loss of political legitimacy (and support)
  • Increased unhealthy competition between areas

5
Weak alignment set in context
  • Economic growth trends prospects too modest
  • Employment/Unemployment Crisis increase
  • Poverty and inequality levels on the up
  • Access to basic services rising demand

6
WC Macro-Economic Outlook, 2004/05 - 2007/08
7
WC Sectoral Real Economic Growth, 2004/5 2006/7
8
Cross-sectoral economic trends
  • Outperforming SA in output, poorer in employment
    (due to low informal sector growth)
  • Growth from tertiary sectors which holds
    implications for those with/without skills
  • Importance of finance and business services
    output and employment generation
  • Decline in manufacturing employment, especially
    textiles and clothing
  • Effects of tourism critical but also uncertain

9
Unemployment Rates
10
W-Cape Poverty Levels by Race
11
W-Cape Household Services Access by Income
Quintile, 2000
12
W-Cape Household Services Access by Income
Quintile, 2000
13
Implications of contextual trends
  • Development Crisis
  • Massive and stubborn unemployment due to
    restructuring of the economy and insufficient
    growth
  • Deepening inequality, which exacerbates poverty
  • Growing services backlogs due to rapid growth of
    households
  • Social dysfunction and implosion, especially in
    poor communities

14
Response Shared Growth Development
  • Critical overarching outcomes to pursue
  • Enhancing provincial economic growth above 6
  • Advancing broad-based provincial economic
    participation (unemployment below 20 in 5yrs
    below 10 in 15 yrs)
  • Increasing provincial employment
  • Reducing transaction input costs of doing
    business in Province (esp. SMMEs)
  • Strengthening social inclusion cohesion (social
    capital)
  • Improving human development potential in terms of
    access to quality basic social services
  • Enhancing environmental resource sustainability
    in relation to provincial growth development
    path

HOW?
15
National imperatives for alignment
  • Ten Year Review captured impressive progress in
    first decade, but not sufficient to achieve
    overall objectives of the Peoples Contract
  • Vision 2014 sets the course for more strategic
    agenda to achieve a more dynamic growth path
  • Primary priorities
  • GROW THE ECONOMY
  • Establish sustainable livelihoods that involve
    the marginalised
  • Extend grants but also move away from dependency
    to economic self-reliance
  • Improve the capacity and performance of the state
    for growth and development

16
National imperatives (2)
  • there are hundreds of thousands of things that
    government does and should continue to do but it
    should define a new trajectory of growth and
    development, identify the key things required to
    attain it, and make strategic choices in
    expending effort and allocating resources in
    order to blaze along this new trail (MTSF
    2004-2009)
  • NB Making the right strategic choices requires
    sound information and analysis about development
    trends, opportunities and challenges

Peoples Contract Manifesto
Vision 2014
MTSF 2004-2009
NSDP
PGDS
PSDF
IDP
MSDF
17
Rationale for greater alignment (1)
  • Persistent and widespread poverty unemployment
    foremost challenges
  • In the last 9 years we have been
  • Less successful in growing the economy or
    creating jobs although more positive changes
    recently

Better at providing services and grants
?
?
  • Four major social trends (demographics, labour
    market, household size, migration) in last decade
    affected ability to make a sustainable impression
    on unemployment poverty despite substantial
    government intervention
  • Key Better Performance by the State

18
Rationale for greater alignment (2)
Need to include a geographical dimension to
growth and employment.
19
Elements of alignment and harmonisation
PROCESS
20
Improving the performance of the state through
greater alignment
  • A system for coordinated government priority
    setting, resource allocation and implementation
    requires a strategic basis moving beyond mere
    structures and procedures

2. A shared agreement on the nature and
characteristics of the space economy
1. Alignment of strategic development priorities
and approaches in all planning and budgeting
processes
3. Strategic principles for infrastructure
investment and development spending
21
Elements of alignment system
Space economy
National priorities and objectives
The normative principles and guidelines embodied
in the national spatial perspective provide the
central organising concept for facilitating
alignment and serve as the mechanism and basic
platform for better coordination and alignment of
government programmes.
22
NSDP Principles
  • Economic growth is a prerequisite for the
    achievement of other policy objectives, key among
    which would be poverty alleviation.
  • Government spending on fixed investment, beyond
    the constitutional obligation to provide basic
    services to all citizens (such as water,
    electricity as well as health and educational
    facilities), must target localities of economic
    growth and/or economic potential in order to
    attract Private-sector investment, stimulate
    sustainable economic activities and/or create
    long-term employment opportunities.
  • Efforts to address past and current social
    inequalities should focus on people not places.

23
NSDP Principles, cont
  • In localities where there are both high levels of
    poverty and development potential, include fixed
    capital investment beyond basic services to
    exploit the potential of those localities.
  • In localities with low development potential,
    government spending, beyond basic services,
    should focus on providing social transfers, human
    resource development and labour market
    intelligence.
  • In order to overcome the spatial distortions of
    apartheid, future settlement and economic
    development opportunities should be channelled
    into activity corridors and nodes that are
    adjacent to or link the main growth centres.

24
NSDP leads to a strategic approach
Economic Dev.
Basic Services
Citizenship political empowerment
Safety Net
Sustainable Human Settlements
25
IDP/PGDS
  • IDP compiled through
  • bottom-up consultative processes
  • Inputs from line functions
  • Sectoral imperatives
  • Filtering of communities needs into strategic
    objectives of municipality and available
    resources and capacity to deliver
  • Provinces PGDS in process through
  • Outcomes of Prov Growth Devt Summit Agreement
    (PDC)
  • iKapa elihlumayo strategies
  • Contributions of 30 IDPs
  • Analysis that flow from the Provincial Economic
    Review Outlook (PERO)
  • Sustainable Development Implementation Plan
  • Provincialisation of NSDP guidelines and research

26
iKapa ElihlumayoEight Strategic Thrusts
  • Micro-economic Development Strategy
  • Strategic Infrastructure Plan
  • Prov. Spatial Development Framework
  • Building Human Capital
  • Social Capital Formation/Building
  • Effective Financial Governance
  • Coordination and communication (intra
    inter-government)
  • Provincial-Municipal Interface towards integrated
    government

27
IGR Priorities
  • Practical alignment of NSDP, PGDS IDP
  • Establishment and operationalisation of PIF
  • IDP Hearings Processes
  • MFMA operationalisation
  • Coherent Human Settlement Policy and Strategy
  • PCC Priority Programmes Projects
  • Urban Rural Nodes
  • Community Development Workers
  • Priority Mega-Development Projects
  • World Cup 2010 planning
  • Public Transport, esp. Klipfontein Corridor
  • N2 Gateway

28
Enkosi
  • www.capegateway.gov
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