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RED case study and emerging themes WHAT ECONOMIC ACTIONS ARE YOU INVOLVED IN? WHAT WORKS AT LOCAL SCALE? WHAT WORKS AT REGIONAL SCALE? Case study 1: LM • Small town municipality on the edge of the metro • Stagnant economy with services challenges • DBSA partnership • Agricultural economic base (60%) with excellent natural resource base (7 dams, 15 mountain ranges, country lifestyle, world heritage site) • Located between 4 thriving tourism regions • Opportunity and gap analysis identified tourism as a quick win opportunity The Cape Country Meander • Eight towns, 4 tourism associations, 2 brands • All struggling with visitor numbers, length of stay and spend • Industry quick to identify that umbrella brand and offering would add value to every town and member • Launched a collaborative platform and common brand, The Cape Country Meander at municipal level • Developed product offerings Tools • Growth: – Branding and marketing: Municipality and industry – Infrastructure – soft (TCCM and MTB team) and hard (Steam train): Industry and Municipality • Development: – Value chain mapping and enterprise development programme : Municipality – Tourism grants conditions: Municipality • Inclusion: – Jobs – Track development contractors: Private sector & NGO – FET training: Local FET college Regional Scale • Tourists , Businesses, surrounding municipal put pressure to move to regional scale • Recognition that municipal boundary limiting and need to work across 3 municipalities – regional platform needed • Political constraints so needed industry leadership • Regional scale sets strategy and brokers relationships • Local scale implements tools Garden Route Case study 2: DM • Large rural district outside Nelson Mandela Bay Metro with low population densities, arid declining hinterland and growing coastal strip • 9 local municipalities • DBSA partnership • Sluggish agri-economy • Interesting capacity and opportunities for innovation Facilitating innovation • Strong focus on innovation systems linking industry, agriculture and HEI to generate growth and jobs. Key initiatives included: – Natural Fibre Cluster – linked to innovative beneficiation of plant and animal fibres (pineapple, agave, wool) • Pineapple: (ECDC, DM, DEDAT, CSIR and Industry) • Agave: from low tech community craft applications to hi-tech natural fibre composite development for motor and aeronautical industry (ECDC, CSIR, DEDAT and Industry) – Renewable energy initiative – as major new opportunity for farmers • Policy and regulatory guidelines to manage major wind farm investments so as to mitigation of negative effects: (District) • Wind training and research facility (BCEDA, DM, CSIR, HEIs) • RE value chain exploration linked to automotive industry manufacturing and assembly strengths: (Industry) • Related industries opportunities – green energy and electric cars: (HEI, TIA and Industry) – Eco-system restoration linked to green jobs and community asset creation: (Municipalities) Tools • Growth: – Investment promotion – EE: Formalising the innovation system • Development: – Natural Fibre sector initiative – Linking SMMEs to new markets • Inclusion: – Community Trusts linked to Wind farms – Green jobs Regional scale • Extensive exploration of cross boundary alliances and extending focus of regional action – Regional fibre cluster reconstitutes as provincial fibre cluster – Energy Initiative becomes joint NMB and Cacadu Western Eastern Cape Regional Innovation Forum • Regional strategy, regional networks, local action Case study 3: Province • Competitiveness drive • Political commitment to green economy • Dedicated SPV • Extensive knowledge economy • High levels of innovation in smart systems Green is Smart framework Finances Smart enterprise Capabilities Smart agri-production Knowledge & Innovation Smart eco-systems Rules and Regulation Smart mobility Infrastructure Smart living & working Tools • Growth: – – – – Investment promotion Infrastructure Business climate Brand development • Development: – Sector development – Skills training – Linking entrepreneurs to investors and markets • Inclusion: – Contractor development – Green works – Green Procurement Regional Scale • Metropolitan Functional Region – focus of innovation system and investment attraction • Western Cape – brand, green works, energy infrastructure • Western, Northern, Eastern Cape – renewable energy economy • Gauteng – green economic sector finance • Global – investment attraction Brainstorm PART 2: EMERGING THEMES LEADERSHIP RED leadership • Vision, strategy, and agenda setting • Good understanding of the economic system and your role • Customer orientation that recognises business and investors and people as customers • Good communication and people skills • An able to broker and lead coalitions of actors from different sectors • Collaboration and alignment between different tiers of government and horizontal alignment • Strong on facilitating and building networks • The ability to sequence and balance interventions at different scales GOOD ADMINISTRATION Administrative systems • Efficient machinery to support the collaboration and partnerships • Excellent stakeholder management • Good information and knowledge management • Responsiveness • Good communication • Good M&E and feedback loops INNOVATION Innovation system • • • • The market place is important Partnerships with HEI key R&D important part of innovation process Innovation doesn’t always entail giant leaps forward. Rather it is about gradual step-by-step improvements • Innovation often means changing something that for the time being at least works • Innovation requires a system of support to stimulate and manage flow of knowledge amongst partners COLLABORATIVE COMPETITION Working with competitors • Identify competitors • Identify gaps in the value chain • Identify common agendas with competitors and how you can support each other to secure the agglomerations needed, expand the value chain • Limit areas of competition NETWORKS AND LINKAGES Relating Local to Regional to Global • RED is all about linkages into an economic system – HEI, R&D, BA, DFIs, Govt • Linkages up and down: local-regional-nationalregional cluster-global • Reviewing the local and regional boundaries on a regular basis is also important and shifting these as market needs change INSTITUTIONAL ARRANGEMENTS Organising for RED • No single institutional model • Depends on who is part of the system and where capacity and leadership reside? • Focus on what is the platform for engagement and collaboration? For example: – In TWK: Coalition of business. Model used in North America where economic councils have been created to create a ‘top table’ for co-ordination purposes. – In Cacadu: HEI and EDA similar to Europe where RDA used to lead and coordinate RED activities – In Western Cape Government has played the role of supporting the RED process similar to Asia. UNDERSTANDING ROLES AND RESPONSIBILITIES Role of government in supporting RED • Understand the private sector – who are the key players, who are the intermediaries? • Understand how to work with the private sector • Create a supportive and responsive environment • Facilitating partnerships and building relationships and networks • Act as a catalyst not driver • Ensure that there is adequate decision making authority and funding at the right level to work effectively with the private sector – no empty promises Role of private sector in support RED • Understand their role in the regional economy • Understand the advantages of collaboration • Drive the economy: Generate economic activity, income and jobs • Share market information and research and work more with HEI • Invest in innovation and training • Partnerships and building relationships and networks Role of HEI in supporting RED • • • • • • • Understand their role in the RED Supply education and training Knowledge management Undertake R&D linked to real businesses Commercialisation of innovation Monitoring, reflection and learning partner Partnerships and building relationships and networks