Abstract

As opposed to the predominant focus of global value chain (GVC) research on export-oriented contexts, this article examines the prospects for development in places where the dominant form of engagement with GVCs is import-oriented. Through the case of South Africa’s pharmaceutical industry, this analysis demonstrates the challenge for local manufacturing to compete, and the associated state policy responses, in a place which is largely plugged into GVCs as an end market rather than as a production location. As multinationals have concentrated production elsewhere, South Africa’s manufacturing capacity in the pharmaceutical industry has relatively declined in recent decades. Having struggled in its facilitator role, the South African state’s efforts to promote local manufacturing have turned to the producer role through a state-owned company and especially the buyer role through public procurement. Motivations for state policy in this context, however, must navigate the tension which sometimes exists between the industrial interest in local manufacturing and the consumer and health policy interest in access to medicines. The experience of South Africa’s pharmaceutical industry points to the wider challenge and consequences of import-oriented engagement with GVCs for local industrial development.

Highlights

  • Contemporary understandings of development with regard to global value chains (GVCs) are largely set within a liberal global economy where export orientation has been the dominant development strategy

  • What are the prospects for development and associated state policies in places that are not major centers of manufacturing for global lead firms and that are mainly importers of products produced via GVCs?

  • Through the case of South Africa’s pharmaceutical industry, where there are relatively few localized assets that can be leveraged for export competitiveness, this article examines the development challenges of an engagement with GVCs which is oriented towards the import of products for domestic consumption

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Summary

Introduction

Contemporary understandings of development with regard to global value chains (GVCs) are largely set within a liberal global economy where export orientation has been the dominant development strategy. What are the prospects for development and associated state policies in places that are not major centers of manufacturing for global lead firms and that are mainly importers of products produced via GVCs?

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