Advanced manufacturing sector can drive job creation

Advanced manufacturing sector can drive job creation

South African Minister of Trade and Industry, Dr Rob Davies said on Monday that advanced manufacturing could drive industrialisation and create sustainable jobs.

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Speaking at the two-day Annual Manufacturing Indaba which started in Kempton Park on Monday, Davies said: “Manufacturing is critical to the South African economy and it can be used to create new sustainable growth through the diversification of our economy. This can lead to productive, active and inclusive higher levels of advanced manufacturing and industrialisation.”


The aim of the conference is to boost the growth potential of key manufacturing industry sectors, and to provide a platform for informative and interactive sessions with the prime movers of the nation’s manufacturing sectors.


Davies added that one could not separate job creation and industrialisation as they went hand in hand and that South Africans and the rest of the continent neededd to move up the value chain and diversify their economies.


“Real opportunities for the market lie in the African market and we need to industrialise as a continent. We have to find ourselves a different niche in a changing African market through strategic cross-border infrastructure upgrading, complementary natural resource development, integrated industrialisation, reductions in inter-state red tape and rapidly expanding intra- and inter-regional trade,” said Davies.


Davies further explained that extraction and exporting played a small part in the industry turn-over and that if government and the private sector worked closely with and support local manufacturers export and competitiveness could be raised.


Chairperson of the Manufacturing Circle, Bruce Strong, said the manufacturing industry enabled South Africa to create more jobs.


“The industry is important in that it employs 1.6 million people and contributes 12% to the Gross Domestic Products. This has led to many skilled people employed and sustained in the long-term,” he said.


While he agreed that there was a market access in Africa, Strong said the manufacturing industry still needed to gear up in order to be competitive. -ANA

 

(File Photo: Gallo Images)

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