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  • 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 […]
  • 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 […]
  • Growth Lab

    News

    news

    Harvard report diagnoses drivers of South Africa’s severe economic and social challenges

    November 15, 2023

    Researchers at the Growth Lab identify problems undermining inclusive growth: collapsing state capacity and spatial exclusion Cambridge, MA — A new report by Harvard’s Growth Lab finds that South Africa’s […]
  • Working Papers

    Hausmann, R., et al., 2023

    Growth Through Inclusion in South Africa

    It is painfully clear that South Africa is performing poorly, exacerbating problems such as inequality and exclusion. The economy’s ability to create jobs is slowing, worsening South Africa’s extreme levels […]
    Growth Lab

    It is painfully clear that South Africa is performing poorly, exacerbating problems such as inequality and exclusion. The economy’s ability to create jobs is slowing, worsening South Africa’s extreme levels of unemployment and inequality. South Africans are deeply disappointed with social progress and dislike the direction where the country seems to be heading. Despite its enviable productive capabilities, the national economy is losing international competitiveness. As the economy staggers, South Africa faces deteriorating social indicators and declining levels of public satisfaction with the status quo. After 15 years, attempts to stimulate the economy through fiscal policy and to address exclusion through social grants have failed to achieve their goals. Instead, they have sacrificed the country’s investment grade, increasing the cost of capital to the whole economy, with little social progress to show for it. The underlying capabilities to achieve sustained growth by leveraging the full capability of its people, companies, assets, and knowhow remain underutilized. Three decades after the end of apartheid, the economy is defined by stagnation and exclusion, and current strategies are not achieving inclusion and empowerment in practice.

    This report asks the question of why. Why is the economy growing far slower than any reasonable comparator countries? Why is exclusion so extraordinarily high, even after decades of various policies that have aimed to support socio-economic transformation? What would it take for South Africa to include more of its people, capabilities, assets, and ideas in the functioning of the economy, and why aren’t such actions being undertaken already? The Growth Lab has completed a deep diagnostic of potential causes of South Africa’s prolonged underperformance over a two-year research project. Building on the findings of nine papers and widespread collaboration with government, academics, business and NGOs, this report documents the project’s central findings. Bluntly speaking, the report finds that South Africa is not accomplishing its goals of inclusion, empowerment and transformation, and new strategies and instruments will be needed to do so. We found two broad classes of problems that undermine inclusive growth in the Rainbow Nation: collapsing state capacity and spatial exclusion.

    Learn more about the Growth Lab’s research engagement, Growth Through Inclusion in South Africa.

  • Video

    #DevTalks: Building Inclusive Cities

    Speaker: Carel Kleynhans, CEO, Divercity Property Group In this talk, Carel Kleynhans discusses Divercity’s work in the affordable housing sector and why a new vision for pro-poor urban development that is […]
  • Journal Articles

    Manea, R.E., Piraino, P. & Viarengo, M., 2023

    Crime, Inequality and Subsidized Housing: Evidence from South Africa

    World Development, 168

    We study the relationship between housing inequality and crime in South Africa. We create a novel panel dataset combining information on crime at the police station level with census data. […]
    Growth Lab
    We study the relationship between housing inequality and crime in South Africa. We create a novel panel dataset combining information on crime at the police station level with census data. Our analysis shows that housing inequality explains a significant share of the variation in both property and violent crimes, net of spillover effects, time and district fixed effects. An increase of roughly one standard deviation in housing inequality explains 10–12 percent of total crime increases. Additionally, we analyze a prominent housing program for low-income South Africans to show that policies that decrease inequality in housing conditions may also reduce crime. We suggest that these policies can help mitigate the societal and individual strains that are often correlated with criminal engagement.
  • Working Papers

    Sturzenegger, F., Klinger, B. & Ordonez, I., 2023

    What is South Africa’s Crop Production Potential?

    Combining satellite data with FAO potential yields we provide a new measure of South Africa’s current and potential crop farming output. We find that field crop production is twice its […]
    Growth Lab

    Combining satellite data with FAO potential yields we provide a new measure of South Africa’s current and potential crop farming output. We find that field crop production is twice its census estimate, contributing 1.4% of GDP rather than 0.7%, and that achieving potential could increase its contribution a further 0.5% of GDP. Estimating horticulture potential is more difficult. We find that its 0.7% contribution to GDP is massively unreported, with actual production at 2.5%. Reaching potential could increase this number a further 0.5%. The distance from current to potential output represents over 100 billion 2017 rand of additional gross income and about 350.000 thousand jobs and is unevenly distributed across the country and concentrated in four provinces: Free State, Western Cape, Kwazulu-Natal and Eastern Cape. Our result suggests that there is room to expand agriculture, but because the potential gains are geographically concentrated, the solutions should have a strong location dimension.

    Related project: Growth through Inclusion in South Africa