AES 2023 - Session 4 : Industrial Policy for Innovation and Technology Upgrading in Africa

September 22, 2023

After decades of market-oriented free-trade policies supposed to efficiently allocate resources across industries in a way that reflects consumer preferences and technological possibilities, industrial policy is making a strong comeback. Such “Laisser-Faire” policies have undoubtedly acted as a catalyst for income catch-up and contributed significantly to poverty reduction across developing countries but were certainly not without blemish. There is some evidence that the set of economic policies prescribed by the Washington Consensus led to the demise of certain infant industries, limited the creation of local value-added, and trapped these developing countries in a technological dependency. Consequently, government intervention in designing the industrial policy is today more than justified to address the different market imperfections. As far as the African continent is concerned, there is a real need to foster innovation and approach the technological frontier. Africa cannot rely solely on FDI to develop its domestic industries and foster economic growth overall. Besides, African policymakers should also learn lessons from the failure of previous import-substitution policies, that didn’t ensure a rise of competitive local industries.

- How can Africa best negotiate this new turn to industrial policy design?

- What should be done to ensure that the next industrial policy will foster innovation and encourage intellectual protection?

- How can the African continent make the best use of its comparative advantage in terms of population, to re-skill the human capital?

Chair: Abdelkhalek Touhami, Full Professor, Mohammed VI Polytechnic University (Morocco)

Speakers: Andy McKay, Professor, University of Sussex (UK) Mustapha Kamel Nabli, Senior Associate, Economic Research Forum (Tunisia) Thierry Warin, Professor, HEC Montréal (Canada)

RELATED CONTENT

  • Authors
    March 25, 2015
    The strategy to vertically integrate mining producers requires the identification of the right conditions for its financing. Many approaches are possible and the technique of securitization, although widely stigmatized since the financial crisis of 2008, must be considered. Several conditions are however necessary. It is unlikely that the off-balance sheet securitization is currently positioned as an important means to finance this sector’s production capacity. Whatever the scope of ...
  • Authors
    February 10, 2015
    Manufacturing is declining as a share of GDP not only in advanced countries, but in developing countries as well. This new trend, a result of complex forces, should be seen on balance as a reason for development-optimism, not pessimism. In the 21st century economy, manufacturing remains important, but poor countries can attract investment, grow rapidly and diversify away from agriculture on the basis of many possible sources of comparative advantage, without artificially promoting m ...
  • Authors
    Pierre-Richard Agénor
    January 24, 2015
    L’économie marocaine fait actuellement face au risque de se retrouver « prise en tenaille », entre, d’un côté les pays à faible revenu en croissance rapide, bénéficiant d’une main-d’oeuvre abondante et bon marché, et, de l’autre, les pays à moyen revenu, capables d’innover rapidement. De plus, les investissements massifs de la Chine en Afrique subsaharienne ont contribué à accélérer la participation de certains pays de cette région à la nouvelle division internationale du travail, p ...
  • Authors
    Pierre-Richard Agénor
    January 24, 2015
    OCP Policy Center est ravi de recueillir vos commentaires et d’engager la discussion autour de la publication de son dernier livre sur la stratégie de croissance du Maroc à l’horizon 2025 dans un environnement international en mutation, co-écrit par Pierre Richard Agénor et Karim El Aynaoui. L’économie marocaine fait actuellement face au risque de se retrouver « prise en tenaille », entre, d’un côté les pays à faible revenu en croissance rapide, bénéficiant d’une main-d’œuvre abond ...
  • Authors
    Pierre-Richard Agénor
    January 24, 2015
    The Moroccan economy is currently facing the risk of becoming caught between the rapid-growing low-income countries with abundant and cheap labor, and middle-income countries that are able to innovate quickly. In addition, China’s massive investments in Sub-Saharan Africa have accelerated the participation of some countries in the region in a new international division of labor, especially in low-skill-intensive light manufacturing. In parallel, through the structure of its trade a ...
  • Authors
    L'environnement dans lequel fonctionnent les systèmes financiers des pays arabes du Sud de la Méditerranée (PASM)1 a changé ces deux dernières décennies. Ces systèmes pays ont connu de profondes mutations depuis le déclenchement de la crise financière internationale. Certes ils n’ont pas subi de conséquences directes de la crise, mais la dégradation de la croissance mondiale a eu des effets majeurs sur les économies de ces pays. Les tensions politiques de la région ont aussi forteme ...