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Exporting Africa explains how firms, which have developed export trade in Sub-Saharan economies, have been able to sustain their competitiveness in the face of rapid technological change in the international economy: in short, how they deal with the threats and the promises which rapid technological changes present to Africa. The papers present new empirical research and an innovative conceptual framework.
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Exporting Africa
The economic crisis which has hit Africa in the past decade is raising questions about Africa’s future position in world trade and whether it has any chance of developing a competitive industrial structure. Professor Wangwe addresses these questions on the basis of commissioned studies of fifty-five exporting manufacturers in six African countries carried out by local experts of considerable standing in the field. He examines the question of why some firms in the Sub-Saharan economies have been able to maintain their positions in the world market despite generally unfavourable circumstances. In particular the papers seek to understand how these firms have been able to sustain their competitiveness in the face of rapid technological change in the international economy in the context of the threats and promises such change presents to Africa. A case is made for selective complementary investments by governments to build the technological capabilities which are necessary for attaining and maintaining competitiveness. The country studies present new empirical research and an innovative conceptual framework which will be of interest to academics in the development field and to government and international policy makers. Samuel M.Wangwe is Director of the Economic and Research Foundation, Dar es Salaam. He was Senior Research Fellow at UNU/ INTECH between 1991 and 1994.
UNU/INTECH Studies in New Technology and Development Series editors: Charles Cooper and Swasti Mitter
The books in this series reflect the research initiatives at the United Nations University Institute for New Technologies (UNU/INTECH) based in Maastricht, the Netherlands. This institute is primarily a research centre within the UN system and evaluates the social, political and economic environment in which new technologies are adopted and adapted in the developing world. The books in the series explore the role that technology policies can play in bridging the economic gap between nations, as well as between groups within nations. The authors and contributors are leading scholars in them field of technology and development; their work focuses on: • the social and economic implications of new technologies; • processes of diffusion of such technologies to the developing world; • the impact of such technologies on income, employment and environment; • the political dynamics of technological transfer. The series is a pioneering attempt at placing technology policies at the heart of national and international strategies for development. This is likely to prove crucial in the globalized market, for the competitiveness and sustainable growth of poorer nations. 1 Women Encounter Technology Changing Patterns of Employment in the Third World Edited by Swasti Mitter and Sheila Rowbotham 2 In Pursuit of Science and Technology in Sub-Saharan Africa J.L.Enos 3 Politics of Technology in Latin America Edited by Maria Inês Bastos and Charles M.Cooper 4 Exporting Africa Technology and Industrialization in Sub-Saharan Africa Edited by Samuel M.Wangwe
Exporting Africa Technology, Trade and Industrialization in Sub-Saharan Africa
Edited by Samuel M.Wangwe
London and New York
Published in association with the UNU Press
First published 1995 by Routledge 11 New Fetter Lane, London EC4P 4EE This edition published in the Taylor & Francis e-Library, 2005. “To purchase your own copy of this o