380
Views
0
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Articles

Industrialisation for structural transformation: Economy-wide impacts of agro-processing development in Tanzania

ORCID Icon & ORCID Icon

References

  • Ajakaiye, O & Page, J, 2012. Industrialisation and economic transformation in Africa: Introduction and overview. Journal of African Economies 21(suppl_2), ii3–18.
  • Aryeetey, E & Moyo, N, 2012. Industrialisation for structural transformation in Africa: appropriate roles for the state. Journal of African Economies 21(suppl_2), ii55–85.
  • Badiane, O & Makombe, T, 2014. The theory and practice of agriculture, growth, and development in Africa. WIDER Working Paper 2014/061. UNU-WIDER, Helsinki, Finland.
  • Binswanger-Mkhize, HP, McCalla, AF & Patel, P, 2010. Structural transformation and African agriculture. Global Journal of Emerging Market Economies 2(2), 113–52.
  • Breisinger, C, Diao, X, Thurlow, J, Yu, B & Kolavalli, S, 2009. Modeling growth options and structural change to reach middle income country status: The case of Ghana. Economic Modelling 26(2), 514–25.
  • Chuang, Y & Lin, C, 1999. Foreign direct investment, R&D and spillover efficiency: evidence from Taiwan’s manufacturing firms. Journal of Development Studies 35(4), 117–37.
  • Diao, X, 2010. Economic importance of agriculture for sustainable development and poverty reduction: Findings from a case study of Ghana. Paper presented on the Global Forum on Agriculture, OECD Headquarters, Paris.
  • Diao, X, Hazell, PBR, Kolavalli, S & Resnick, D (Eds.), 2019. Ghana’s economic and agricultural transformation: Past performance and future prospects. International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI) and Oxford University Press, New York.
  • Diao, X, Kweka, J & McMillan, MS, 2017. Economic transformation in Africa from the bottom up: evidence from Tanzania. (IFPRI Discussion Paper 1603). FPRI, Washington, DC.
  • Diao, X & Thurlow, J, 2012. A recursive-dynamic computable general equilibrium model. In Diao X, Thurlow J, Benin S & Fan S (Eds.), Strategies and priorities for African agriculture: economywide perspectives from country studies. IFPRI, Washington, DC, 17–50.
  • Dinh, HT, Palmade, V, Chandra, V & Cossar, F, 2012. Light manufacturing in Africa: Targeted policies to enhance private investment and create jobs. The International Bank for Reconstruction and Development/World Bank, Washington, DC.
  • Dorosh, P & Thurlow, J, 2018. Beyond agriculture versus Non-agriculture: Decomposing sectoral growth–poverty linkages in five African countries. World Development 109(2018), 440–51.
  • Fukase, E & Martin, W, 2017. Agro-processing and horticultural exports from Africa. IFPRI Discussion Paper 01690. IFPRI, Washington, DC.
  • IFPRI (International Food Policy Research Institute), 2018. Agricultural Total Factor Productivity (TFP), 1991–2014: 2018 Global Food Policy Report Annex Table 5. [Online]. http://www.ifpri.org/publication/agricultural-total-factor-productivity-tfp-1991-2014-2018-global-food-policy-report. Accessed: 22 October 2018.
  • Jajri, I, 2007. Determinants of total factor productivity growth in Malaysia. Journal of Economic Cooperation 28(3), 41–58.
  • Kormawa, P & Jerome, A, 2015. Renewing industrialisation strategies in Africa. In Badiane O & Makombe T (Eds.), Beyond a middle income Africa: Transforming African economies for sustained growth with rising employment and incomes. ReSAKSS Annual Trends and Outlook Report 2014. International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI), 133–155.
  • Kuznets, S, 1966. Modern economic growth. Yale University Press, New Haven.
  • Kuznets, S, 1973. Modern economic growth: Findings and reflections. American Economic Review 63, 247–58.
  • Laborde, D & Traore, F, 2017. Sensitivity of computable general equilibrium models to macroeconomic closure rules: Evidence from the IFPRI Standard Model. AGRODEP Technical Note 0015.
  • Lavopa, A & Szirmai, A, 2012. Industrialisation, employment a Paper Series #2012-081. UNU, Maastricht, The Netherlands.
  • Lin, JY & Chang, H, 2009. DPR debate: Should industrial policy in developing countries conform to comparative advantage or defy it? Development Policy Review 27(5), 483–502.
  • Lin, JY & Monga, C, 2010. Growth identification and facilitation: The role of the state in the dynamics of structural change. Policy Research Working Paper 5313. The World Bank, Office of the Vice President, Washington, DC.
  • Lofgren, H & Robinson, S, 2008. Public spending, growth and poverty alleviation in sub-Saharan Africa. A dynamic CGE analysis. In Fan S (Ed.), Public expenditures, growth, and poverty: lessons from developing countries. Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore, 184–224.
  • Lofgren, H, Harris, L & Robinson, S, 2002. A standard computable general equilibrium (CGE) model in GAMS (Vol. 5). IFPRI, Washington, DC.
  • Lukwaro, FY, 2014. An overview of the investment climate and opportunities in Tanzania on Japan-EAC Investment Seminar. [Online]. http://www.unido.or.jp/files/TIC_20140328.pdf. Accessed 6 July 2018.
  • Mazungunye, PP, 2020. Industrialisation for economic transformation: Economy-wide impacts of agro-processing development in Tanzania. Masters thesis, Stellenbosch University.
  • McMillan, M, Rodrik, D & Sepúlveda, C (Eds.) 2017. Structural change, fundamentals, and growth: A framework and case studies. IFPRI, Washington, DC.
  • Mensah, JT, Adu, G, Amoah, A, Abrokwa, KK & Adu, J, 2016. What drives structural transformation in sub-Saharan Africa? African Development Review 28(2), 157–69.
  • Mensah, EB & Szirmai, A, 2018. Africa sector database (ASD): Expansion and update. UNU-MERIT Working Paper series, #2018-20. UNU, Maastricht, The Netherlands.
  • NBS (National Bureau of Statistics) and MITI (Ministry of Industry, Trade and Investment), 2016. The 2013 census of industrial production: Statistical report. URT, Dar es Salaam.
  • Page, J, 2011. ‘Should Africa industrialize?’ (UNU-WIDER Working Paper no. 2011-47), Helsinki.
  • Page, J, 2012. Can Africa industrialise? Journal of African Economies 21(AERC Supplement 2), ii86–125.
  • Page, J, 2016. Industry in Tanzania performance, prospects and public policy. WIDER Working Paper 2016/5. UNU-WIDER, Helsinki.
  • Paremoer, T, 2018. Regional value chains: Exploring linkages and opportunities in the agro-processing sector across five SADC countries. Working Paper 4/2018. CCRED, Johannesburg.
  • Randriamamonjy, J & Thurlow, J, 2017. 2016 social accounting matrix for Tanzania: A Nexus Project SAM. IFPRI, Washington DC.
  • Robinson, DO, Gaertner, M & Papageorgiou, C, 2011. Tanzania: Growth acceleration and increased public spending with macroeconomic stability. In Chuhan-Pole P & Angwafo M (Eds.), Yes Africa can: success stories from a dynamic continent. The World Bank, Washington, DC, 21–49.
  • Schuenemann, F, Thurlow, J & Zeller, M, 2016. Levelling the field for biofuels: Comparing the economic and environmental impacts of Biofuel and other export crops in Malawi. Agricultural Economics 48(3), 301–15.
  • Thurlow, J, 2008. A recursive dynamic CGE model and microsimulation poverty module for South Africa. IFPRI, Washington, DC.
  • TIC (Tanzania Investment Centre), 2018. Business linkage. [Online]. http://www.tic.go.tz/businessLinkages. Accessed: 25 May 2018.
  • Timmer, P, McMillan, M, Badiane, O, Rodrik, D, Binswanger-Mkhize, H & Wouterse, F, 2012. Patterns of growth and structural transformation in Africa: trends and lessons for future development strategies. IFPRI Thematic Research Note 2.
  • TSED (Tanzania Socio Economic Database), 2018. Tanzania Socio Economic Database (TSED). [Online]. http://www.devinfo.org/tanzania/. Accessed: 11 June 2018.
  • UNIDO (United Nations Industrial Development Organization), 2012. Independent UNIDO country evaluation: United Republic of Tanzania. United Nations Industrial Development Organization, Vienna.
  • UNIDO (United Nations Industrial Development Organization), 2014. Tanzania investor survey report. United Nations Industrial Development Organization, Vienna.
  • URT (United Republic of Tanzania), 1999. Tanzania Development Vision 2025. URT, Dar es Salaam.
  • URT (United Republic of Tanzania), 2016a. National Five-year Development Plan 2016/17–2020/21. URT, Dar es Salam.
  • URT (United Republic of Tanzania), 2016b. Agricultural Sector Development Programme 2. URT, Dar es Salaam.
  • URT (United Republic of Tanzania), 2018. National population projections. URT, Dar es Salaam.
  • Wangwe, S, Mmari, D, Aikaeli, J, Rutatina, N, Mboghoina, T & Kinyondo, A, 2014. The performance of the manufacturing sector in Tanzania: Challenges and the way forward. WIDER Working Paper 2014/085. UNU-WIDER, Helsinki.
  • World Bank, 2014. Tanzania: Jobs wanted. Country Economic Memorandum 90434. [Online]. http://www.worldbank.org/en/country/tanzania. Accessed 10 June 2018.
  • World Bank, 2016. Macro poverty outlook: Tanzania. [Online]. http://pubocs.worldbank.org/en/251391477329281759/Macro-Poverty-Outlook-Tanzania. Accessed: 18 June 2018.
  • World Bank, 2017. United Republic of Tanzania Systematic Country Diagnostic. Report No. 110894-TZ.
  • World Bank, 2021. World Bank development indicators. https://data.worldbank.org/products/wdi. Accessed 9 March 2021.
  • Wuyts, M & Kilama, B, 2016. Planning for agricultural change and economic transformation in Tanzania? Journal of Agrarian Change 16(2), 318–41.
  • Yeboah, FK & Jayne, TS, 2018. Africa’s evolving employment trends. The Journal of Development Studies 54(5), 803–32.

Reprints and Corporate Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

To request a reprint or corporate permissions for this article, please click on the relevant link below:

Academic Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

Obtain permissions instantly via Rightslink by clicking on the button below:

If you are unable to obtain permissions via Rightslink, please complete and submit this Permissions form. For more information, please visit our Permissions help page.