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Public seminars held during APORDE 2015 

1. AFRICAN DEVELOPMENT AND THE POLITICAL ECONOMY CHALLENGES OF INDUSTRIAL POLICY

Speakers: Christopher Cramer and Mushtaq Khan

Date:     Wednesday 2 September 2015                 

Time:    From 18:30

Venue:  CCRED Seminar Room, 2nd Floor, 5 Sturdee Avenue, Rosebank

Organised by the Centre for Competition, Regulation and Economic Development (CCRED)

For more information download African development and the political economy challenges of industrial policy

2. INNOVATION AND INDUSTRIAL POLICY

Speakers: Ha-Joon Chang; Neva Makgetla; Imraan Patel

Date: Thursday 3 September 2015

Time: 09:30 – 13:00 (followed by lunch)

Venue:  Kingdom Caterers, 317 Tram Street, Brooklyn, Pretoria

Organised by the Department of Trade and Industry

For more information download Innovation and industrial policy

3.  MINERAL RESOURCES AND INDUSTRIAL POLICY

Speaker:  Paul Jourdan

Date:     Thursday 3 September 2014                                                                       

Time:    From 18h30

Venue:  IDC Conference Centre; 19 Fredman Drive, Sandton

Co-host:  Industrial Development Corporation (IDC)

For more information download Mineral resources and industrial policy

4. LABOUR AND ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT

Speakers:  Ben Fine and Nicolas Pons-Vignon

Date:     Monday 7 September 2015                                                                        

Time:    From 18h30

Venue: SEBS seminar suite, 1st Floor – New Commerce Building, West Campus, Wits University

Co-host: Independent World of Work

For more information download Labour and economic development

5.  CHINA, INDIA AND THE GLOBAL ECONOMY AFTER THE CRISIS

Speaker:   Jayati Ghosh

Date:  Tuesday 8 September 2015                                                                           

Time:  From 18h00 (refreshments from 17:30)

Venue: C-Ring 315, Auckland Park Kingsway Campus, University of Johannesburg

Co-host: University of Johannesburg, Department of Economics

For more information download China, India and the global economy after the crisis

6. TRANSFER PRICING AND TRADE MISPRICING

Speakers: Jonathan di John, Paul Jourdan and Kathy Nicolaou-Manias

Date: Wednesday 9 September 2015

Time: 09:00 – 12:00 (followed by lunch)

Venue:  Southern Sun Pretoria, corner Steve Biko and Pretorius Street, Arcadia

Co-host: TIPS

For more information download Transfer pricing and trade mispricing

Presentations:

Jonathan Di John: Transfer Pricing in Export Processing Zones

Paul Jourdan: Transfer Pricing in Extractive Industries

Kathy Nicolaou-Manias: Understanding Trade Mispricing in South Africa

  • Date Wednesday, 02 September 2015

Insights into the manufacturing sector: Outcomes of the latest quarterly Manufacturing Bulletin

The quarterly manufacturing bulletin is an initiative of the manufacturing circle. It serves to provide an analysis of trends in the South African manufacturing sector. The focus of this development dialogue will be to present the second quarter, 2015 manufacturing bulletin with the aim to inform policy and facilitate discussion around strategies to support the manufacturing sector in ways that support employment and equitable economic growth.
 
Presenter: Baba Tamana-Gqubule
Baba-Tamana Gqubule has a Masters in Development Studies from the School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS), University of London and a Bachelor of Economics Honours degree from Rhodes University. She has experience as a Policy Analyst at the Economic Development Department. She was involved in developing policies aimed at broadening participation in the economy with a specific focus on conducting research to inform the department's strategy to increase the participation of womenin the economy.
 

Estimating disaggregated sector employment multipliers for the City of Johannesburg

The social, economic and political policy imperative of increasing employment has been heightened in recent months by numerous announcements of large-scale retrenchments and increasing awareness that national, provincial and local governments are increasingly falling behind their own targets for employment creation. Increasingly, public entities are being required to assess, and report on, the employment-supporting impacts of their programs. However, while the initial impact of public expenditure may be relatively easier to assess, the indirect and induced impacts of such spending are much harder to estimate. This presentation will focus on the results of attempts to estimate the employment-supporting impacts of spending and investment facilitation by the City of Johannesburg at a sectoral level.
 
Presenter: Keith Lockwood
Keith Lockwood was previously employed as an economist at the Central Merchant Bank [Senbank], the South African Federated Chamber of Industries and the South African Chamber of Business, before becoming an independent economic and business consultant in 1997.  Since commencing work as an economic consultant Keith has participated in research and advisory projects across a number of different sectors and policy fields, ranging from financial services, construction, infrastructure, and local economic development to skills development, regional integration, tax policy and industrial policy. 

In addition to his consulting work, Keith is an adjunct faculty member of the Gordon Institute of Business Science (GIBS) and regularly makes presentations to some of South Africa's leading corporations. 

Presentation: City of Johannesburg

Estimated Employment Multipliers for the City of Johannesburg

 

  • Date Friday, 21 August 2015
  • Venue TIPS Boardroom, 227 Lange St, Nieuw Muckleneuk, Pretoria

Repositioning electricity planning at the core: An evaluation of South Africa's Integrated Resource Plan

Gaylor Montmasson-Clair

Background:
 Energy and electricity issues in particular have recently been high on the South African agenda. Beyond immediate near-term considerations, reviewing the current electricity planning process is both a timely and necessary exercise. This review, based on an internationally-recognised framework developed by the World Resources Institute and Prayas Energy Group, unpacks the key pillars of an Integrated Resource Plan (IRP) and reviews South Africa's performance. The objective is to provide a comprehensive overview of the key elements of successful electricity planning and to use this framework to reflect on the country's opportunities and challenges for optimal planning and implementation.

TOPIC: Electricity pricing and economic development in South Africa: The real tough choices

Dr Neva Makgetla

Background:  From the 1980s, growth in South Africa has depended in large part on low-cost, coal-fuelled electricity. This trajectory is no longer viable due to the rising costs of both new investment and climate change. TIPS undertook a systematic assessment of options for managing the cost and economic impact of various options for adapting to the new realities of electricity in both the short and long term. 

 

 

  • Date Thursday, 09 July 2015
  • Venue TIPS Boardroom, 227 Lange St, Nieuw Muckleneuk, Pretoria
  • Main Speakers GAYLOR MONTMASSON-CLAIR, Assistant Programme Manager, Sustainable Growth, TIPS. DR NEVA MAKGETLA, Programme Manager, Trade and Industrial Policy, TIPS

The quarterly manufacturing bulletin is an initiative of the Manufacturing Circle. It serves to provide an analysis of trends in the South African manufacturing sector. The focus of this development dialogue will be to present the third quarter manufacturing bulletin with the aim to inform policy and facilitate discussion around strategies to support the manufacturing sector in ways that support mployment and equitable economic growth.

  • Date Tuesday, 17 February 2015
  • Venue TIPS Boardroom, 227 Lange St, Nieuw Muckleneuk, Pretoria
  • Main Speakers Baba-Tamana Gqubule, Economist: Trade and Industry, TIPS.

This presentation will explore the role of Bilateral Investment Treaties (BITs) in Investment Promotion for South Africa and rest of the world. Recent global trends have indicated a decline in the ratification of new BITs with a number of countries (including South Africa) reviewing and cancelling treaties that have been in place for decades. The most recent termination of a treaty was between South Africa and Germany, which came into effect on 22 October 2014. The presentation will also seek to identify the reasons for these cancellations and consider new developments in investment policy formulation.

  • Date Tuesday, 17 February 2015
  • Venue TIPS Boardroom, 227 Lange St, Nieuw Muckleneuk, Pretoria
  • Main Speakers Sithembiso Mtanga, Assistant Programme Manager: Trade and Industry, TIPS

ABOUT THE SPEAKER

Jamie Simpson is an economic and management consultant with 25 years experience related to port planning, infrastructure investment and city-region economic development. He has extensive experience as a Project Director/Manager leading major projects and working with governments and senior executives on strategic planning, investment plans and economic transformation – in Europe, Asia, Africa and North America. He has provided advisory support on a range of port market studies and due diligence for the leading port operators (HPH, DPW, PSA, APMT, ICTSI, China Merchants) and financial institutions (HSBC, BoC, B&B Infrastructure, JPMorgan, Standard and Chartered) as part of their transaction advice.

Jamie was retained by Hong Kong Government and worked with the Port Development Board (Port Development Council), the public-private partnership that includes the world's leading port operators, logistics and shipping lines, for over 10 years in a lead advisor role on port strategy and investment. He has acted as Lead Advisor to governments/ Regional Development Agencies on linking city-region development strategies to port/logistics development – including Felixstowe, Southampton, Teleport and London Gateway in the UK. He has worked with the World Bank, IFC, Asian Development Bank, UK DFID and the Private Infrastructure Development Group (PIDG). Jamie is the Chairperson of the Expert Evaluation Panel of the Cities Alliance Catalytic Fund – a small grant window aimed at funding innovative ideas and approaches related to urbanisation.

Presentation:

Are Ports Drivers of Sustainable Economic Development? Exploring Linkages between Ports, Growth and Employment

Article Front page of The Mercury and Business Report (20 February, 2015):

Dig-out port: 'Think again'

See research paper for related research on increasing port efficinccy and the important role that ports play in economic development. This falls under the TIPS Small Grant Research Papers initiative and is based on Jack Dryer's work for his masters thesis.

Is Durban's Port Expansion necessary?

 

 

  • Date Monday, 16 February 2015
  • Venue TIPS Boardroom, 227 Lange St, Nieuw Muckleneuk, Pretoria
  • Main Speakers Jamie Simpson
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