global value chains and duke cggc’s collaboration in kazakhstan

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© 2014 Duke CGGC Global Value Chains and Duke CGGC’s Collaboration in Kazakhstan November 18, 2015 Gary Gereffi Duke University, Center on Globalization, Governance & Competitiveness

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Page 1: Global Value Chains and Duke CGGC’s Collaboration in Kazakhstan

© 2014 Duke CGGC

Global Value Chains and Duke CGGC’s

Collaboration in Kazakhstan

November 18, 2015

Gary GereffiDuke University, Center on Globalization,

Governance & Competitiveness

Page 2: Global Value Chains and Duke CGGC’s Collaboration in Kazakhstan

© 2014 Duke CGGC

AGENDA

1. Historical Background: Duke CGGC and Kazakhstan

2. Global Value Chains and Economic Diversification

3. Duke CGGC and International Clients

4. RCGC Research and Capacity Building Program

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© 2014 Duke CGGC

DUKE UNIVERSITY, CENTER ON GLOBALIZATION,

GOVERNANCE & COMPETITIVENESS (DUKE CGGC)

Source: http://cggc.duke.edu/

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HISTORICAL BACKGROUND IN KAZAKHSTAN

• World Bank Mission on “Economic Diversification, with Special Emphasis on Oil & Gas Value Chain” (Gereffi & Rodriquez, Sept. 2003)

• Global Value Chain training course (Gereffi & Jahan, 2003-2004) Led to the creation of the Center for Marketing and Analytic Research (CMAR) in 2004

• World Bank Mission on “Kazakhstan: Expanding Opportunities for Enterprise Development in Global Value Chains – The Railway Equipment Industry” (Gereffi& Salinas, June 2011)

• Strategic Partners Group report by Sturgeon & Zylberberg (Jan. 2014), “Industrial Development Strategy for Kazakhstan: Global Value Chains”

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GVCs AND GLOBAL ECONOMIC TRENDS

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GLOBALIZATION & DEVELOPMENT TRENDS

• Post-Washington Consensus world – Global economic recession of 2008-09 and the rise of “emerging economies” have changed export-oriented model

• Geographic consolidation – Emerging economies playing larger role in global supply chains

• Organizational concentration – Lead firms in GVCs are streamlining their sourcing and production networks

• South-South trade and FDI – New growth trajectories

• GVC-oriented industrial policies – Productive development policies are back, but not a return to ISI

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GVCs: GOVERNACE & UPGRADING

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Global value chain analysis provides a holistic

approach for examining the global economy

• Top-down: a focus on lead firms and inter-firm

networks, using varied typologies of industrial

“governance”

• Bottom-up: a focus on countries and regions, which

are analyzed in terms of various trajectories of

economic and social “upgrading”

Page 8: Global Value Chains and Duke CGGC’s Collaboration in Kazakhstan

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DIVERSIFIED, INCLUSIVE AND SUSTAINABLE GROWTH

Economic Upgrading

Social Upgrading

Environmental Upgrading

Sustainable Growth

Development Outcomes:• Job creation• Exports• Income generation• Added value• Better use of resources• Backward linkages

Development Outcomes:• Inclusion of

vulnerable groups• Job creation• Improve working

conditions• Higher wages• Skills acquisition

Development Outcomes:• Soil preservation

and improvement• Water conservation• Wildlife

conservation• Pollution and waste

reduction

Page 9: Global Value Chains and Duke CGGC’s Collaboration in Kazakhstan

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DUKE CGGC CLIENT-CENTERED RESEARCH

AND ADVISORY SERVICES

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DUKE CGGC CLIENTS

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• Costa Rican Foreign Trade Ministry

• Carry out GVC analysis to identify upgrading trajectories and provide recommendations for competitive export growth

• SECTORS: medical

devices, aerospace,

electronics, and offshore

services

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• MINERVA Initiative

• Use GVC framework to analyze food security in the MENA region

• Provide recommendations to design more resilient food security strategies

• SECTORS: wheat and corn

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• U.S. Agency for International Development

• Apply GVC framework to evaluate public-private partnerships for inclusive development

• Provide recommendations to identify, engage and partner with appropriate firms for local needs

• SECTORS: cocoa (Indonesia),

coffee (Rwanda), and fruit &

vegetables (Kenya)

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•RTI International

•Use GVC framework to design national workforce development models responsive to global competition

Model Characteristics:•Demand-driven •Globally oriented •International standards•Dynamic (retraining; continual improvement)

• SECTORS: fruit & vegetables,

apparel, offshore services, and

tourism

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REGIONAL COMPETITIVENESS AND GROWTH

CENTER (RCGC) IN KAZAKHSTAN

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EMERGENCE OF NEW GVC RESEARCH CENTERS

• Global Production Network (GPN) Center – National University of Singapore; launched Jan. 2015 (http://gpn.nus.edu.sg/)

• Regional Growth and Competitiveness Center (RCGC) –Nazarbayev University, Astana, KZ; launched Nov. 2015

• Research Center for Global Value Chains (RCGVC) –Beijing, China (UIBE, MOFCOM et al.); March 2016

• GVC in Europe Network – Birmingham Business School (UK)

• GVC Workshop Series – Rossi Doria Research Centre, Rome, Italy

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INTEGRATED RESEARCH AND CAPACITY BUILDING

PROGRAM FOR RCGC

Program focuses on three complementary components:

1) Establish Research Competiveness and Growth Center

(RCGC) and support its human and institutional capacity

building

2) Develop and collaborate on implementation of a research

agenda focused on economic diversification and regional

competitiveness for Kazakhstan

3) Facilitate visibility and relationship development between the

RCGC and leading international organizations and research

institutions

Page 18: Global Value Chains and Duke CGGC’s Collaboration in Kazakhstan

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PROPOSED RESEARCH AGENDA

1) Wheat value chain in Kazakhstan and the Black Sea region (including Russia and Ukraine)

2) High-value services linked with extractive value chains

3) Kazakhstan’s role in competitive regional value chains (Black Sea, Eurasia)

4) Transport and ICT infrastructure linking Kazakhstan infrastructure iniriatives to GVCs

5) Public-private partnerships in Kazakhstan and inclusive GVCs

6) GVCs and innovation systems -- builds on work done by innovation scholars like Richard Nelson, Sidney Winters, & B.A. Lundvall

Page 19: Global Value Chains and Duke CGGC’s Collaboration in Kazakhstan

© 2014 Duke CGGC

http://www.cggc.duke.edu

[email protected]

Gary Gereffi