Trade negotiators are faced with a bewildering array of new agreements on the horizon. Before embarking on any agreement, governments have to understand the consequences of such a policy. This course is aimed at equipping trade analysts with the economic and spreadsheet knowledge that they need to carry out such research.
Researchers will learn about sources of data, as well as basic techniques to manipulate the data into a useable format. The course will be based mainly on MicroSoft Excel, using real trade and tariff data. The course organisers will attempt to base the examples in the course on the participants' countries of origin, if possible.
Each new concept will be introduced through lectures and then participants will do examples on their own, using real trade data. Participants will thus also become more familiar with their own trade data.
The course will be presented by trade economists from TIPS and will be presented at TIPS' offices in Pretoria, South Africa.
The course will cost R5000 but a limited number of bursaries are available for researchers from the region (outside South Africa).
Input-output analysis, complemented by means of social accounting matrices is often used as a tool to conduct such meso-level economic enquiry. Researchers frequently use these tools to analyse the impact on production, the environment, prices, employment and income effects of policy related changes in international trade, taxes, fiscal policy and investment. Economic modelling techniques that capture economy-wide impacts of policy changes are increasingly being used in South African academic, consulting and research circles. To cater for this increased demand, Trade and Industrial Policy Strategies (TIPS) are offering the fifth one week introductory course in economy-wide policy impact analysis.
As part of the DFID-funded South Africa Trade and Poverty Programme and its objective to promote informed dialogue on South Africa's trade policy amongst key stakeholders, TIPS in 2005 implemented a seminar series under the auspices of Nedlac. These seminars provided a platform for government and civil society representatives (business, labour and broader social interest groups) to discuss critical issues concerning the role of trade policy in fostering poverty reduction and human development in South Africa
During February 2006 much media attention was given to the R372-billion set aside by government for infrastructure investment. But is infrastructure a household term? What entails infrastructure, which are the major sectors? What are the special characteristics of national infrastructure and of household level infrastructure; and where are the backlogs in investment? What are the unique challenges facing each? Will the proposed investments be a quantum leap forward or merely a catch-up? Can municipalities afford to rollout services to all and keep those services running?
These are some of the issues discussed and questions answered in the DBSA Infrastructure Barometer 2006, presented at Nedlac as part of the SATPP Policy Dialogue series.
This is a call for papers to address the role that research has had in inducing changes in trade policy, or in matters related to it, such as competition policy, investment policy or intellectual property rights. Selected papers will be discussed at a workshop in Buenos Aires in July 2006 with publication thereafter.
Due to high demand in South and Southern Africa, Trade and Industrial Policy Strategies (TIPS) is running their annual short course on computable general equilibrium (CGE) modelling course in Gauteng from 17-24 February 2006.
The course is targeted at those who wish to develop professional expertise in the area, as well as those who need to understand the potential and limitations of the use of these approaches without themselves becoming modellers. As such it should appeal to policy makers and analysts in both the public and the private sectors as well as to students and academics.
Globalization offers new opportunities for accelerating development and poverty reduction, but also poses new challenges for policymakers. And there is much concern about the distribution of benefits; in particular whether the poor gain from globalization, and under what circumstances it may actually hurt them. To meet this important agenda, this project aims at producing rigorous theoretical and empirical analysis of the poverty impact of globalization, thereby providing a framework upon which to build strategies for pro-poor globalization'. The project is particularly interested in understanding better the mechanisms through which globalization ultimately affects poverty. And it is important to evaluate how different poor groups are affected in different ways by globalization (the rural versus urban poor for example). The project will produce thematic papers as well as country and regional case studies of globalization's poverty impact.
As part of the DFID-funded South Africa Trade and Poverty Programme and its objective to promote informed dialogue on South Africa's trade policy amongst key stakeholders, TIPS in 2005 implemented a seminar series under the auspices of Nedlac. These seminars provided a platform for government and civil society representatives (business, labour and broader social interest groups) to discuss critical issues concerning the role of trade policy in fostering poverty reduction and human development in South Africa.
Frank Flatters, Professor Emeritus of Economics at Queens University, Canada and consultant to regional organisations and governments in Southern Africa, discussed the economics of the Motor Industry Development Programme (MIDP) at this workshop. To assist in understanding the widely regarded success of the programme and contribute to the current review of its future, Flatters presented an analysis of the way in which the programme operates and some of its actual and alleged benefits and costs. He also reviewed some of the implications of this analysis for MIDP's use as a model for other sectoral industrial policies in South Africa.
The Doha Round of multilateral trade negotiations is underway at the World Trade Organisation (WTO). With no prospect of a successful conclusion of the negotiations by the agreed deadline of 1 January 2005, the WTO General Council agreed in July 2004 to adopt a work programme that seeks to accelerate the negotiating momentum, and to conclude the Round by the end of 2006.
The South African Government is currently preparing its approach to the 6th Ministerial Conference. As part of the preparations, the Government is convening a National Consultative Conference, so that interested parties can participate in informing the development of South Africa's approach to the meeting in Hong Kong, China.
As part of the DFID-funded South Africa Trade and Poverty Programme and its objective to promote informed dialogue on South Africa's trade policy amongst key stakeholders, TIPS in 2005 implemented a seminar series under the auspices of Nedlac. These seminars provided a platform for government and civil society representatives (business, labour and broader social interest groups) to discuss critical issues concerning the role of trade policy in fostering poverty reduction and human development in South Africa.
The practice of import-parity pricing has received much attention in the media in 2005. Import-parity pricing is being challenged at the Competition Tribunal, and the dti has been negotiating with various firms to limit its use. At the seminar, Professor Simon Roberts of the Corporate Strategy and Industrial Development Research Programme at the University of the Witwatersrand who has for a number of years researched this issue and its implications in different sectors of the economy explained how import parity pricing works, where its effects are felt and different ways in which the practice could be limited.
As part of the DFID-funded South Africa Trade and Poverty Programme and its objective to promote informed dialogue on South Africa's trade policy amongst key stakeholders, TIPS in 2005 implemented a seminar series under the auspices of Nedlac. These seminars provided a platform for government and civil society representatives (business, labour and broader social interest groups) to discuss critical issues concerning the role of trade policy in fostering poverty reduction and human development in South Africa.
Towards the end of 2004, TIPS and a number of its network researchers as well as external analysts reviewed several sectors of the South African economy as part of a project commissioned by the Presidency and the ComMark Trust to inform policy debate. As part of this process, Dr. Justin Barnes analysed the clothing sector, its major markets and production trends, as well as its broader dynamics. Based on this analysis, various clothing sector constraints and opportunities and hence policy-related challenges were identified. Barnes discussed these issues, as well as the way this work informed the current debate on calls for increased protection for the clothing sector at this workshop.