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  • Wind turbines in Tunisia

    News

    news

    Energy Transition: Who Are the African Champions?

    November 17, 2025

    Forbes Afrique: Produced by the Growth Lab, this index notably highlights several African countries. Here’s a closer look at the five leading continental countries.
  • Growth Lab
  • Growth Lab
  • Journal Articles

    Fortunato, A. & Santos, M.A., 2025

    Public-Private Dialogs to Spur Export-led Growth: The Case of Productivity Taskforces in Namibia

    Cambridge University Press: Elements in the Economics of Emerging Markets

    This case study examines the implementation of Namibia’s first Productivity Task Force focused on the high-value fruit sector from 2021 to 2024. Productivity task forces, modeled after Peru’s Mesas Ejecutivas, […]
    public_private_dialogs_cover.jpg

    This case study examines the implementation of Namibia’s first Productivity Task Force focused on the high-value fruit sector from 2021 to 2024. Productivity task forces, modeled after Peru’s Mesas Ejecutivas, facilitate public-private dialogues to resolve sector-specific productivity issues. The Namibian Investment Promotion and Development Board, the Ministry of Agriculture, Water and Land Reform, and the Ministry of Finance led the Namibian task force. The study highlights critical stages, including the task force’s management and organization, political authorization, and the identification and resolution of productivity problems. While some challenges remain unsolved, the PTF has laid the groundwork for long-term improvements in government capacity, better public-public coordination, public-private collaboration, and a more business-friendly environment. The study offers valuable insights for implementing similar public-private initiatives in other developing countries. This title is also available as Open Access on Cambridge Core.

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    Cambridge Elements are a new concept in academic publishing and scholarly communication, combining the best features of books and journals. They consist of original, concise, authoritative, and peer-reviewed scholarly and scientific research, organised into focused series edited by leading scholars, and provide comprehensive coverage of the key topics in disciplines spanning the arts and sciences.

    Regularly updated and conceived from the start for a digital environment, they provide a dynamic reference resource for graduate students, researchers, and practitioners.

  • Video

    #DevTalks: Can South Africa’s Government of National Unity Deliver?

    For the past year, the Centre for Development and Enterprise (CDE) has been working on a major initiative, AGENDA 2024: Priorities for South Africa’s new government. It sets out to […]
  • Journal Articles

    Kis, A.B., et al., 2024

    Leaving Home: Cumulative Climate Shocks and Migration in Sub-Saharan Africa

    Environmental and Resource Economics, 87, 321-345.

    We combine a multi-country household panel dataset with high-resolution gridded precipitation data to investigate how cumulative climatic shocks affects the decision to leave the households in five sub-Saharan African countries. […]
    Growth Lab
    We combine a multi-country household panel dataset with high-resolution gridded precipitation data to investigate how cumulative climatic shocks affects the decision to leave the households in five sub-Saharan African countries. We find that while the effect of recent adverse weather shocks is on average modest, the cumulative effect of a persistent exposure to droughts over several years leads to a significant increase in the probability for a household member to leave the household. We speculate that this pattern can be indicative of increased migratory flows due to increase in the frequency of extremes.
  • Video

    Growth Through Inclusion in South Africa

    In this video series, Growth Lab director Ricardo Hausmann discusses some of the challenges facing South Africa; delving into collapsing state capacity, the electricity crisis, spatial exclusion, and how it […]
  • Working Papers

    Bhorat, H., et al., 2024

    Supply-Side Economics of a Good Type: Supporting and Expanding South Africa’s Informal Economy

    This paper argues that South Africa’s persistently high unemployment is in part explained by abnormally low levels of informal sector activity compared to other developing countries. Using cross-country data, it […]
    Growth Lab

    This paper argues that South Africa’s persistently high unemployment is in part explained by abnormally low levels of informal sector activity compared to other developing countries. Using cross-country data, it shows that South Africa is an outlier, with low informality and high unemployment relative to its income level. If South Africa had informality rates consistent with its income level, unemployment would be much lower at around 7% instead of over 25%. The paper explores regulatory barriers, spatial constraints, lack of infrastructure, and crime as key factors inhibiting the growth of the informal sector. To boost informal activity and employment, it recommends a firm-size based policy matrix addressing these constraints, with a focus on regulatory changes to expand market access, zero-rating of licensing fees, provision of critical infrastructure like storage facilities, and transport vouchers and subsidies to connect informal businesses to markets. Implementing such supply-side policy changes could demonstrate the employment potential of the informal sector and build momentum for broader deregulation.

  • Podcast

    Growth Through Inclusion in South Africa with Ricardo Hausmann

    Growth Lab Podcast Series

    Episode Summary In this introductory episode, Ricardo Hausmann, the founder and Director of Harvard’s Growth Lab and the Rafik Hariri Professor of the Practice of International Political Economy at Harvard […]
  • Video

    Why Is South Africa Not Achieving Its Goals?

    Professor Ricardo Hausmann is the founding director of Harvard University’s Growth Lab and the Rafik Hariri Professor of the Practice of International Political Economy at Harvard Kennedy School. The Growth […]
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