How far is Africa from the World Technology Frontier? Closing the South-South Technology Gap

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How far is Africa from the World Technology Frontier? Closing the South-South Technology Gap Gouranga Das, Hanyang University Imed Drine, Islamic Development Bank

Great strides over the last decade Six of the world s ten fastest growing economies of the past decade are in sub-saharan Africa. Many countries have enjoyed growth in income per person of more than 5% a year since 2007. Many of the countries whose well-being has improved most in the past five years are in Africa.

but, a rocky road still lies ahead While the opportunities for development are important, several African economies remain fragile and suffering from underdeveloped infrastructure, and limited diversification of their productive structure. Poverty rates and inequality in many African countries remain unacceptably high. Africa is the only continent where per capita food production has declined over the past 30 years and where unemployment rates remain extremely high.

Main Questions 1. Why do some countries succeed in catching up, while Africa falls behind? 2. What critical factors for catch-up are?

Convergence in GDP per capita over 1990-2010 Due to good performance during the last two decades some African have moved closer to the frontier. But, there are still many African countries in the group that falls behind. The nature of African growth, with its dependence on mineral and mining sectors means that growth has not necessarily contributed to a reduction in inequality. Log(GDP per capita in 1990 (PPP, cte 2005) US$) Losing momuntum 1.5 Moving ahead Brunei Darussalam Nigeria 1 Sierra Leone South Africa Ghana Hong Kong SAR, China Mali Senegal Singapore 0.5 Uganda Brazil Botswana Gambia, The Indonesia Malawi Mauritania Sudan Papua New Guinea Mozambique Congo, Ethiopia Rep. Tanzania 0 Angola Djibouti Togo -6-4 Korea, Rep. -2 Rwanda 0 2 4 6 8 10 Cote d'ivoire Cameroon Kenya India Gabon Niger Guinea-Bissau Comoros Guinea Zambia Benin -0.5 China Thailand Central African Republic Chad Congo, Dem. Rep. Burundi Malaysia Namibia Burkina Faso Madagascar Equatorial Guinea -1 Lesotho Lagging behind -1.5 catching up GDP per capita growth 1990-2010 (PPP, cte 20005) US$)

Africa lags behind emerging economies in productivity. Total Factor Productivity Growth (%) 2 0.5 Labour productivity gap (relative to US) 1.5 1 0.45 0.5 0.4 0 SSA Emerging Economies 0.35 1990s 2000s 0.3 0.25 0.2 0.15 0.1 0.05 50000 40000 30000 20000 10000 0 Labour Productivity per person employed in 2012 US$ 1960s 1970s 1990s 1990s 2000s 0 SSA Emerging Economies Emerging Economies SSA Labour productivity relative to Emerging Economies 1960s 1970s 1990s 1990s 2000s 21% 17% 12% 8% 8%

Levels of output and input per capita and productivity (U.S. = 100 in 2000). Group Summaries Output per capita Input per capita Productivity 2000 2005 2009 2000 2005 2009 2000 2005 2009 World 20.66 23.11 25.09 46.98 48.47 51.59 43.98 47.67 48.64 G7 85.039 90.59 90.18 92.25 94.95 96.46 92.19 95.41 93.49 Developing Asia 7.2017 9.54 12.67 25.00 28.73 35.13 28.80 33.21 36.06 Non-G7 71.74 77.43 79.14 84.15 90.95 96.15 85.25 85.13 82.31 Latin America 21.373 22.97 25.04 33.52 36.16 40.96 63.77 63.52 61.13 Eastern Europe 19.269 25.75 29.60 36.04 37.08 40.25 53.47 69.44 73.55 Sub-Sahara Africa 4.3387 4.84 5.32 15.74 16.85 18.73 27.56 28.72 28.37 N. Africa & M. East 15.317 17.56 19.07 28.53 31.28 34.45 53.69 56.12 55.37 Source: Table 3 of Jorgenson and Vu (2011), JPM. GDP Growth Period 1989-1995 Period 2000-2004 Capital Input Labour input TFP GDP growth Capital Input Labour Input World 2.34 1.34 0.7 0.29 3.25 1.35 0.68 1.22 SSA 1.8 0.52 2.56-1.28 4.22 1.55 1.8 0.88 MENA 4.03 00.95 2.61 0.47 4.4 1.1 1.74 1.56 TFP

Literature: Main drivers of catching-up 1. Capital accumulation 2. Institutional conditions 3. Knowledge/Human Development 4. Social capital/infrastructural Bottlenecks

Growth Variations and TFP Gaps 8 GDP per capita growth 6 Iraq Moldova Tajikistan Turkmenistan Kazakhstan Uzbekistan Armenia Tanzania Romania Russian Federation China 4 Trinidad & Tobago Nigeria Ethiopia Angola Zambia Kuwait Ghana Hong Kong Albania Cambodia Jordan Mozambique Estonia 2 Iceland Singapore Slovak Taiwan Lithuania South Uganda Peru Republic Korea India Mali Syria Burkina Philippines Malaysia Tunisia Faso Qatar Thailand Iran Indonesia West Cyprus Bolivia Egypt Austria Malta Germany Macedonia Poland Sri Lanka Algeria Ukraine United Sweden Czech Republic Latvia Georgia Japan Netherlands Switzerland Guatemala Argentina Israel Dominican Morocco States Ecuador Republic United Kenya Malawi Venezuela Finland Sudan Yemen Denmark France Ireland Kingdom Croatia Pakistan Kyrgyz Colombia Turkey Republic Bangladesh 0 Oman Belgium Italy Barbados Cameroon New Canada Spain Zealand Hungary Brazil -2-1 Luxembourg St. Australia Chile Norway Vietnam Jamaica Mexico 0 Lucia Uruguay Côte d'ivoire Niger South Africa 1 2 3 4 5 Costa Rica Greece United Saudi Arab Arabia Madagascar Portugal Bahrain Emirates -2 Bulgaria -4 Senegal TFP growth, 2000s Very high correlation between the level of income and the level of knowledge 1.1 GDP per capita, cte 2005 US$ 1 0.9 0.8 0.7 0.6 0.5 0.4 Very high correlation between the level of GDP per capita and TFP growth Macao Qatar SAR, United Arab Hong Luxembourg Kong SAR, Kuwait China Singapore Emirates United China Norway Switzerland Austria Belgium Australia Canada Cyprus France Iceland Germany Netherlands States Trinidad and United Ireland Denmark Finland Czech Italy Israel Japan Kingdom Sweden Oman Korea, Greece Slovenia Spain Republic Rep. Saudi Russian Tobago Arabia Malta New Zealand Slovak Portugal Argentina Croatia Poland Republic Estonia Botswana Belarus Chile Lithuania Hungary Dominican Lebanon Kazakhstan Bosnia Mexico Turkey Panama Federation Mauritius Malaysia Dominica Uruguay Latvia Venezuela, RB and Azerbaijan Brazil Costa Rica Bulgaria Ecuador Algeria Republic China Albania Colombia South Peru Africa Romania Tunisia Herzegovina Thailand Angola Egypt, El Namibia Arab Salvador Rep. Ukraine Bolivia Armenia Guatemala Cape Verde Fiji Georgia Honduras Indonesia Swaziland Jordan Morocco Sri Paraguay Lanka Mongolia Nicaragua India Philippines Uzbekistan Vietnam Moldova Mauritania Lao PDR Cameroon Cambodia Nigeria Pakistan Sudan Yemen, Rep. Tajikistan Kyrgyz Republic Cote Bangladesh d'ivoire Lesotho Senegal Benin Ghana Kenya Burkina Tanzania Zambia Faso Ethiopia Guinea Nepal Rwanda Uganda Mozambique Madagascar Mali Sierra Leone Malawi Eritrea 0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1 1.2 Knowledge Index

Africa is not investing enough in knowledge Regional totals for R&D Expenditure (GERD) 2002 and 2009 GERD (in billions PPP$) % world GERD GERD as % of GDP GERD per capita (in PPP$) Source: UNESCO Institute for Statistics (UIS) estimations, October 2011. 2002 2009 2002 2009 2002 2009 2002 2009 World 787.7 1,276.9 100.0% 100.0% 1.70% 1.77% 125.5 187.3 Developed countries 650.0 931.5 82.5% 72.9% 2.22% 2.32% 543.0 756.6 Developing countries 136.4 343.3 17.3% 26.9% 0.83% 1.11% 31.1 71.9 Least developed 1.3 2.1 0.2% 0.2% 0.22% 0.20% 1.8 2.6 Americas 319.2 457.5 40.5% 35.8% 2.08% 2.13% 372.9 494.6 North America 297.2 417.5 37.7% 32.7% 2.57% 2.72% 929.5 1,222.9 Latin America and the 22.0 40.0 2.8% 3.1% 0.59% 0.66% 41.0 68.6 Europe 236.4 363.4 30.0% 28.5% 1.66% 1.76% 297.7 448.7 European Union 205.7 300.3 26.1% 23.5% 1.76% 1.92% 424.5 602.2 Commonwealth of 16.9 37.0 2.1% 2.9% 1.18% 1.19% 81.6 183.2 Central, Eastern and 13.7 26.1 1.7% 2.0% 1.19% 1.36% 134.7 238.9 Africa 7.0 11.8 0.9% 0.9% 0.42% 0.41% 8.2 11.8 South Africa 2.3 4.7 0.3% 0.4% 0.73% 0.93% 50.6 95.5 Other Sub-Saharan 1.9 3.4 0.2% 0.3% 0.30% 0.29% 3.1 4.6 Arab States in Africa 2.5 3.7 0.3% 0.3% 0.36% 0.31% 13.6 17.7 Asia 214.0 421.8 27.2% 33.0% 1.48% 1.62% 57.1 104.2 Japan 108.2 137.1 13.7% 10.7% 3.17% 3.36% 858.1 1,083.5 China 39.2 154.1 5.0% 12.1% 1.07% 1.70% 30.5 115.5 Israel 7.1 8.8 0.9% 0.7% 4.59% 4.27% 1,138.0 1,211.2 India 13.3 1.7% 0.74% 12.2 Commonwealth of 0.5 1.0 0.1% 0.1% 0.25% 0.23% 7.0 13.4 Newly Industrialised 39.7 78.7 5.0% 6.2% 1.44% 1.83% 98.3 178.8 Arab States in Asia 1.2 2.3 0.1% 0.2% 0.13% 0.14% 11.4 17.9 Other in Asia (excl. 4.8 11.0 0.6% 0.9% 0.31% 0.42% 7.2 15.2 Oceania 11.2 22.4 1.4% 1.8% 1.66% 2.20% 350.5 622.4

Business environment is not favorable for innovation and knowledge diffusion Global Competitive Index and some pillars for regions (2012-13) Institutions Technological adoption Innovation and sophistication factors Values Efficiency enhancers Basic requirements Regions according to Stages of Development Advanced Economies (average) 4.95 5.58 4.79 4.97 5.46 5.02 Asian Tigers (average) 5.15 5.77 5.01 5.36 5.95 5.37 Developing Asia (average) 3.87 4.65 3.60 4.02 4.42 4.18 Emerging and Developing 3.75 4.54 3.37 3.81 4.23 3.94 Economies (average) Middle East and North Africa 4.20 4.77 3.55 3.95 4.71 4.22 (average) Sub-Saharan Africa (average) 3.74 4.34 3.19 3.46 3.73 3.58 Source: Global Competitiveness Report 2012-13. Tables, Data Platform GCI

Africa is still lagging behind in Human Development Human Development Index and its Components Human Development Index (HDI) Life expectancy at birth Mean years of schooling Expected years of schooling Gross National Income (GNI) per capita Non-income HDI Value (years) (years) (years) (Constant 2005 Value PPP$) 2011 2011 2011 2011 2011 2011 Regions East Asia and the Pacific 0.671 72.4 7.2 11.7 6,466 0.709 Europe and Central Asia 0.751 71.3 9.7 13.4 12,004 0.785 Latin America and the 0.731 74.4 7.8 13.6 10,119 0.767 Caribbean South Asia 0.548 65.9 4.6 9.8 3,435 0.569 Sub-Saharan Africa 0.463 54.4 4.5 9.2 1,966 0.467 World 0.682 69.8 7.4 11.3 10,082 0.683 Source: Adapted from Table 1, Human Development Report 2011, The UN

African countries knowledge position is not on line with the level of economic development KEI Economic Incentive Innovation Education ICT recent 2000 recent 2000 recent 2000 recent 2000 recent 2000 East Asia and the Pacific 5.32 5.79 5.75 6.06 7.43 7.43 3.94 3.68 4.14 5.98 Latin America 5.15 5.54 4.66 5.14 5.8 6.14 5.11 5.07 5.02 5.8 MENA 4.74 5.16 5.41 5.41 6.14 6.44 3.48 3.8 3.92 4.97 SSA 2.55 3.04 2.91 3.13 3.95 3.95 1.44 1.7 1.9 3.36 World 5.12 5.95 5.45 5.61 7.72 7.75 3.72 3.89 3.58 6.53 Source: WB

Conceptual Framework Principal pathways underlying mechanism behind distance from technological frontier Educational attainment, Human Capital R&D, Skill, Technological Achievement, Brain Circulation Technological Progress and General-purpose Technology (ICT) Beyond-the-border External Factors: Globalization-led Trade, FDI Human Development Invention and Innovative Capability Internal behind-theborder factors Technology Spillover/Diffusion Competitiveness and Productive Efficiency Socio-Institutional Factors: Social Capital, Institutions, Financial Development, etc. Technology Adoption/Absorption Factors Technology Gap/Differences and Distance from Best-practice Frontier North-South, South- South TFP divergences

Model Specification The general model to be estimated is defined as follows : TTTTTTTTTT_GGG ii = α i + β 1 X ii + ε ii Technology gap: Measured using meta-frontier approach Xit includes: An indicator of human development (health, education, demography). An indicator of financial development. An indicator of liberalization. An indicator of the quality of business environment. An indicator of the quality of infrastructure. An indicator of knowledge. 1. Emerging dynamic South : Brazil, South Korea, Singapore, Taiwan, South Africa, India, and China. 2. Advance Economies: OECD countries 3. African Economies: Angola, Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Côte d'ivoire, DR Congo, Ethiopia, Ghana, Kenya, Madagascar, Malawi, Mali, Mozambique, Niger, Nigeria, Senegal, Sudan, Tanzania, Uganda, Zambia, Zimbabwe.

Technology gap 0.9 0.8 Technical Efficiency 0.7 0.6 0.5 0.7 0.6 0.5 0.4 0.4 0.3 0.2 0.1 0 1970 1972 1974 1976 1978 1980 1982 1984 1986 1988 1990 1992 1994 1996 1998 2000 2002 2004 SSA Emerging 0.3 0.2 0.1 0 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 Emerging Africa The increasing technology gap relative to the global technology suggests that the capacity of the region to absorb the new technology is very limited and that the region still lacks of real engines for economic growth.

Main causes of technology gap in Africa Dependent variable : Technology Gap Ratio Model 1 Model 2 Infrastructure Quality 0.095 (0.013) 0.11 (0.018) Human Development 0.221 (0.056) 0.22 (0.05) Business Environment 0.038 (0.005) 0.03 (0.02) Trade 0.04 (0.02) 0.038 (0.006) Knowledge 0.006 (0.003) 0.004 (0.001) Africa/Emerging Economies Infrastructure Gap -0.07 (0.03) Human Development Gap Business environment Gap -0.061 (0.02) -0.01 (0.0017) L1.techgap 0.81 (0.032) 0.82 (0.034) Knowledge capabilities backed by good infrastructure, human development, openness, and favorable business environment are essential to succeed in catching up. Africa s poor infrastructure and lack of human development are the most significant barriers to technology catch-up.

Conclusion Growing external demand for Africa s exports and growing internal demand combined with high potential in agriculture and renewable energy provide Africa with a unique opportunity to become a global growth pole over the next decade. However, African countries cannot expect an improvement in economic performance unless they succeed to improve their ability to acquire and adapt to new technologies. The development processes in the region is distorted and essential reforms are needed if these are to remain viable in the global economy. An effective reform approach in African countries can be based on the following actions: building market institutions, developing political institutions, ameliorating the investment climate, strengthening the rule of law and combating corruption. The African countries have also to encourage the private sector to improve youth employment, develop the financial sector which is shown to be very important in increasing the economic efficiency.