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Industrial Clusters and Micro and Small Enterprises in Africa : From Survival to Growth.
Title:
Industrial Clusters and Micro and Small Enterprises in Africa : From Survival to Growth.
Author:
Bank, World.
ISBN:
9780821386286
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (186 pages)
Series:
Directions in Development
Contents:
Half Title Page -- Title Page -- Copyright -- Contents -- Foreword -- Acknowledgments -- Abbreviations -- Overview -- Performance Gaps between Domestically Owned and Foreign-Owned Firms in Africa -- Industrial Clusters in Africa -- Growth Constraints for Survival Clusters -- Building Managerial Human Capital -- Implications for Policies -- Chapter 1 - Introduction -- Dualistic Structure of the Private Sector in Africa -- Performance Gap between Domestically Owned and Foreign-Owned Enterprises in Africa -- Notes -- References -- Chapter 2 - Unbundling Foreign-Domestic Performance Gaps in Africa's Private Sector -- Productivity Gap -- Market Access: Participation in Nonlocal Markets -- Notes -- References -- Chapter 3 - Industrial Clusters as Natural Agglomerations of Micro and Small Enterprises: A Conceptual Framework -- Concept of Clusters -- Economic Geography of Industrial Clusters -- Beyond Transportation Costs: Market and Government Failures, Transaction Costs, and Industrial Clusters -- External Linkages and Cluster Competitiveness -- Internal Dynamics and External Linkages in Industrial Clusters around the World -- Role of Clusters in Micro and Small Enterprise Development -- Notes -- References -- Chapter 4 - Industrial Clusters and Business Performance of Micro and Small Enterprises in Africa -- Clustering and Business Performance: Natural Industrial Clusters in Light Manufacturing Industries -- Nontraditional, Nonmanufacturing Clusters in Africa -- Notes -- References -- Chapter 5 - Location, Market Access, and Business Performance of Cluster-Based Enterprises -- Location Choice of Micro and Small Light Manufacturers -- Micro-Level Choice of Location and Business Performance: Findings from the Arusha Furniture Cluster Case Study -- Notes -- References.

Chapter 6 - Agglomeration and Growth Challenges for Enterprises in Survival Clusters in Africa -- Growth Bottlenecks in Survival Clusters -- Successful Transformation from Informal Survival-Cluster Enterprises to Formal Enterprises -- Implications of Cluster Growth for Employment -- Note -- References -- Chapter 7 - Building Managerial Human Capital in Africa's Survival Industrial Clusters -- Cluster-Based Pilot Managerial Skill Training Programs in Kumasi and Nairobi -- Assessing the Impacts of Training Programs -- Implications of the Results -- Notes -- References -- Chapter 8 - Policy Implications: Turning Survival into Growth -- Building Managerial Skills -- Sound Spatial and Urbanization Policy -- Supporting Market Expansion through Regional Integration -- Government Cluster Development Policies -- Note -- References -- Appendix 1 - Instrumental Variable Model Estimation on Domestic Ownership Effect on Productivity -- Reference -- Appendix 2 - Basic Characteristics of Sampled Micro and Small Light Manufacturing Enterprises Inside and Outside the Clusters -- Appendix 3 - Data Envelopment Analysis -- Reference -- Appendix 4 - Format of Managerial Skills Training Programs -- Notes -- References -- Appendix 5 - Average Treatment of Treated and DID Matching Estimator -- References -- Appendix 6 - List of Background Papers and Boxes Contributed for the Study -- Index -- Back Cover.
Abstract:
The World Bank, Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA) Research Institute, and the Foundation for Advanced Studies on International Development (FASID), in collaboration with researchers affiliated with the African Economic Research Consortium (AERC), recently conducted a study on Africa's domestic enterprises to improve the understanding of the constraints micro and small enterprises in Africa face in improving productivity and expanding their markets. In Africa, there are stark performance gaps between domestically owned enterprises and foreign-owned enterprises in terms of sales performance, productivity, and ability to reach distant markets. Among others, size appears to be a dominant factor in explaining the gap. Against this background, the study analyzes how naturally formed industrial clustersâ€"concentrations of enterprises engaged in same or closely related industrial activities in specific locationsâ€"could potentially mitigate constraints Africa's micro and small enterprises face and enhance their business performance. The study is one of the first comprehensive quantitative inquiries on industrial clusters in Africa. The analysis specifically focuses on the role of spontaneously grown clusters of light manufacturing industries based on a set of original case studies of industrial clusters conducted for this research project. One of the key findings from the case studies was that cluster-based micro and small enterprises are performing better than similar micro and small enterprises outside of the clusters in terms of sales performance and ability to reach distant markets. Market access is a leading reason for cluster-based enterprises to choose their current locations. However, cluster-based enterprises face another set of unique growth constraints. By the very nature of spontaneous agglomera¬tion, new enterprises continue to

flow to the clusters seeking the profit opportunities and better access to markets at such locations. The result can be intense competition in addition to increased congestion. Space constraints often impede growth within clusters. The lack of alternative locations available for industrial activities in the same cities, generic infrastructure bottlenecks, and unclear zoning policies and their unpredictable changes limit firms' location choices and constrain their mobility. While competition should improve efficiency, lack of capacity among those competing cluster-based enterprises to invest and innovate does not generate growth out of the competition. The vast majority of naturally formed clusters of light manufacturing industries in Africa are still at a “survival” level, where agglomeration externalities are only limited to expand quantity but not quality as we observe in more advanced innovation-oriented clusters in elsewhere in the world. Existing studies on such natural industrial clusters in Africa have found that the lack of managerial skills among entrepreneurs running micro and small enterprises is a major constraint for innovation and growth in the clusters. As a part of this study, pilot managerial skills training programs were conducted in two industrial clusters on an experimental basis, where a group of randomly selected entrepreneurs within the clusters were given three-week long crush course of based management such as bookkeeping, marketing, business planning, and production management. The impact evaluation of the experiments showed significant positive impacts of the training programs on value added and gross profits of enterprises. Raising the current survival-type industrial clusters, which have been formed as a coping mechanism to weak investment climate, into more dynamic innovating clusters will be an important avenue

for fostering growth of micro and small enterprises in Africa. While national efforts to improve investment climate and investments in human capital are undoubtedly important, there could be more targeted policies to be formulated, in complementing general policies, to support growth of micro and small domestic enterprises using existing industrial clusters as a natural springboard for their growth. In that context, the study discusses the merit of cluster-based managerial human capital development to build steps toward more innovation-oriented clusters, the importance of sound spatial planning policy, particularly at the local level in the context of urban planning, the need to expand market access and economic linkages for industrial clusters including regional integration and linkages with large enterprises.
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
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