Manufacturing sector in spotlight

eThekwini Municipality's manufacturing sector takes centre stage at Economic Development and Growth in eThekwini (EDGE) Seminar at the Moses Mabhida Stadium.

THE manufacturing sector in Durban still has an untapped potential for growth, which was evident during the recent Economic Development and Growth in eThekwini (EDGE) Seminar at the Moses Mabhida Stadium.

The seminar was hosted by the Policy, Strategy, Information and Research Department within the municipality’s Economic Development and Investment Promotion Unit, in partnership with the University of KwaZulu-Natal (UKZN).

The theme of the seminar, Making Industrial Policy Relevant at a Local Level, aimed to unpack problems and other matters as they are experienced on the ground by medium and large firms in eThekwini as key actors for job retention and creation and for which there is an imperative to respond.

It is critical for policy-makers to have a sense of how firms are dealing with current challenges and how they envisage the future.

The seminar falls under the Collaborative Research Study of Manufacturing Sector Firms in Durban, where local government has partnered with key stakeholders to gain a better understanding of one of the most significant sectors in the economy.

Deputy city manager of Economic Development and Planning, Dr Naledi Moyo, pointed out, while speaking at the seminar, that the city has recently adopted an economic development and job creation strategy, which places emphasis on the role of the manufacturing sector.

Acting deputy director general of the Department of Trade and Industry, Garth Strachan, encouraged manufacturers to get into the public space and be clear about the centrality of the manufacturing sector to the economy.

Strachan stressed the point of ensuring local production and procurement among both manufacturers and government. He said that municipalities need to make it clear that local procurement is a priority.

Shunnon Tulsiram, who heads the municipality’s Economic Development and Investment Promotion Unit, said the city needs to de-codify the incentives and initiatives from the DTI and that an analysis of the performance of KZN firms in accessing these incentives needs to be carried out to assess the extent that local firms are benefiting from these.

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