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Impact of global economic integration and the changing role of cities

Gauteng Inter-Governmental Conference: “ Enhancing Co-operative Governance through Information Sharing and Consultation ” 22 November 2002. The South African Cities Network as a Developmental Strategy – Andrew Boraine, Advisor to Minister FS Mufamadi, Provincial and Local Government.

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Impact of global economic integration and the changing role of cities

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  1. Gauteng Inter-Governmental Conference: “Enhancing Co-operative Governance through Information Sharing and Consultation” 22 November 2002 The South African Cities Network as a Developmental Strategy – Andrew Boraine, Advisor to Minister FS Mufamadi, Provincial and Local Government

  2. Impact of global economic integration and the changing role of cities • `De-bordering’ of national and local economies • Concentration of economic activities in `global city-regions’ • Cities as `territorial platforms from which groups of firms contest global markets’ • Importance of cities as centres of innovation and learning within knowledge-based economy

  3. Negative trends within developed global city-regions due to global economic integration… • Xenophobic responses to cross-border labour migration • Shift from traditional city centres to multi-nodal urban systems • Widening of inequalities • Withdrawal of wealthy communities into `privatopias’ • Growing mismatch between jobs, housing and transit

  4. …magnified in cities in developing countries… • Growth of hyper-large cities • Inequality and marginalisation • Social and spatial segmentation • Fortressed communities • Retreat of public space • Urban violence • Fewer resources to deal with greater problems

  5. and potentially negative in South Africa because of… • Historically distorted national and local spatial economies and urban form (`displaced urbanisation’) • Unchecked expansion of multiple business nodes and peripheral location of low-income housing and informal settlements • Inadequate public transport systems for communities trapped in `zones of poverty’ to be able to gain access to the urban economy

  6. Cities and the national economy • In SA, 20% of towns and cities produce 82% of GDP • 80% of the economy’s manufacturing is concentrated in six metropolitan regions • During the 1990s, 58% of all new economic growth took place in just 4% of the country’s area • In the channel between Johannesburg and Tshwane which makes up just 0,2% of the country’s area, 24% of GGP growth in the 1990s took place • There is a direct correlation coefficient between the level of urbanisation and GDP per capita, although lower in SA than in comparable developing economies • Urban development is a national economic policy issue

  7. Table 1: Contribution of South Africa’s Six Metropolitan Areas to Total GDP, 1990, 1996 and 2000 (%) (Source of data: Naude and Krugell (2002) `An inquiry into cities and their role in subnational economic growth in South Africa’, Potchefstroom University)

  8. Goals of SA Cities Network • Promote good governance and management of South African cities • Analyse strategic challenges facing South African cities, particularly in the context of global economic integration and national development • Collect, collate, analyse, assess, disseminate and apply the experience of large city government in a South African context • Promote a shared-learning partnership between different spheres of government to support the governance of South African cities

  9. Buffalo City Cape Town Ekurhuleni eThekwini Johannesburg Mangaung Msunduzi Nelson Mandela Tshwane The South African Cities Network Company is a non-profit voluntary organisation owned by and accountable to its members via a Board of Directors The Cities Network will operate through a secretariat hosted by the City of Johannesburg, and programme managers located in various cities Membership and Governance Structure

  10. Intergovernmental (vertical) and multi- sectoral information and knowledge sharing City to city (horizontal) information and knowledge sharing

  11. Networking and Partnerships • National and Provincial Government Departments • Regional and global city networks, in particular, African cities • Non-governmental organisations • Private sector organisations • Universities and research institutes

  12. Thematic focus areas • Metropolitan Economic Strategy (DTI; Econ Dev MECs) • Urban Poverty Research (DPLG) • AIDS Compentant Cities (Dept Health; AMICAALL) • Urban Development Indicators (Depts of Housing and Health; StatsSA; UN-Habitat GUO) • Transport (Dept of Transport)

  13. Metropolitan Economic Strategy • Strategy, not just projects • Intergovernmental and multi-sectoral, not just LED • Growth and poverty reduction (business/ market and community/ equity integration) • Mainstream within municipality (cross-cutting) not add-on (line function) • Cooperation between cities based on identification of comparative advantage within sectors, not `race to the bottom’ chase for foreign direct investment through incentives

  14. Metropolitan Economic Strategy Sub-programmes • Policy, strategy and implementation guidelines • Research: urban/ rural linkages; location of production in space; integration of formal and informal economies • Training and peer-to-peer support • Sectoral/ industry cluster/ network support strategies • Identification of intergovernmental and multi-sectoral roles and responsibilities (e.g. transport, safety & security) • Role of parastatals (e.g. ports, airports, telecommunications) • Workforce skills development

  15. Urban Poverty Research Project

  16. SA City Development Index

  17. Introducing SA Cities Poverty Indicators

  18. AIDS-Competent Cities

  19. Instruments for information and knowledge-sharing • Thematic working groups (quarterly meetings) • Peer review (e.g. Jo’burg; Buffalo City) • Documentation of best practices and innovations (e.g. Mangaung community-based planning; Msunduzi HIV/AIDS strategy; Cape Town computer-aided mass appraisal system) • Electronic data base (www.sacities.net) • Joint research • Quick briefs and special reports • Seminars, workshops and training • Calendar of activities and events

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