Endogenous Obstacles to Development in Global Value Chains: Insights From the Oil and Gas Sector

The World Bank promotes integration into global value chains as the path towards development. By liberalising their respective national economies, African countries are expected to benefit from economic impulses, with more and more activities beyond resource extraction being relocated to peripheral...

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Main Author: Sören Scholvin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2020-08-01
Series:Africa Spectrum
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/0002039720937024
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spelling doaj-09b78d5639d84dbe8710159961001f6e2020-11-25T04:10:34ZengSAGE PublishingAfrica Spectrum0002-03971868-68692020-08-015510.1177/0002039720937024Endogenous Obstacles to Development in Global Value Chains: Insights From the Oil and Gas SectorSören Scholvin0Institute of Geographical Sciences, Free University of Berlin, Berlin, GermanyThe World Bank promotes integration into global value chains as the path towards development. By liberalising their respective national economies, African countries are expected to benefit from economic impulses, with more and more activities beyond resource extraction being relocated to peripheral locations and generating so-called linkages there. This analytical report focuses on the upstream oil and gas sector, showing that Africa’s hydrocarbon-rich countries do not achieve economic progress merely because of being part of global value chains. The reason for this is endogenous obstacles to investment. Services – especially in engineering and logistics – are carried out by South African firms, which bring their own equipment and staff or work in South Africa. The emerging economy therefore benefits from linkages that exploration and extraction of oil and gas in developing countries generate.https://doi.org/10.1177/0002039720937024
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sören Scholvin
spellingShingle Sören Scholvin
Endogenous Obstacles to Development in Global Value Chains: Insights From the Oil and Gas Sector
Africa Spectrum
author_facet Sören Scholvin
author_sort Sören Scholvin
title Endogenous Obstacles to Development in Global Value Chains: Insights From the Oil and Gas Sector
title_short Endogenous Obstacles to Development in Global Value Chains: Insights From the Oil and Gas Sector
title_full Endogenous Obstacles to Development in Global Value Chains: Insights From the Oil and Gas Sector
title_fullStr Endogenous Obstacles to Development in Global Value Chains: Insights From the Oil and Gas Sector
title_full_unstemmed Endogenous Obstacles to Development in Global Value Chains: Insights From the Oil and Gas Sector
title_sort endogenous obstacles to development in global value chains: insights from the oil and gas sector
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Africa Spectrum
issn 0002-0397
1868-6869
publishDate 2020-08-01
description The World Bank promotes integration into global value chains as the path towards development. By liberalising their respective national economies, African countries are expected to benefit from economic impulses, with more and more activities beyond resource extraction being relocated to peripheral locations and generating so-called linkages there. This analytical report focuses on the upstream oil and gas sector, showing that Africa’s hydrocarbon-rich countries do not achieve economic progress merely because of being part of global value chains. The reason for this is endogenous obstacles to investment. Services – especially in engineering and logistics – are carried out by South African firms, which bring their own equipment and staff or work in South Africa. The emerging economy therefore benefits from linkages that exploration and extraction of oil and gas in developing countries generate.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/0002039720937024
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