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Linking education and the local economy

Intermediaries in a furniture ecosystem

Maison d'édition
African Minds Publishers
Издано в
Cape Town
Année de publication
2025
Pages
198
Poids
0,772 kg
ISBN
9781067253714
73 USD
Frais de livraison:
30 USD
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Linking Education and the Local Economy examines the collapse of linkages between South Africa’s post-school education and training system and the declining furniture industry. Using a case study approach, it explores reasons behind the erosion of the sector’s competitiveness. The book shows how intermediaries – organisations or individuals bridging gaps between firms, education providers and government – could revitalise the industry by fostering collaboration, knowledge exchange and innovation. The book contends that South Africa’s furniture industry, once thriving, has suffered due to global competition, neoliberal policies and employer disengagement from public education systems which are viewed as outdated and bureaucratic. The absence of intermediaries exacerbates these challenges, leaving firms isolated and innovation stagnant. While the literature highlights intermediaries as key to strengthening innovation ecosystems, South Africa’s ‘ruggedly individualistic’ business culture and state inefficiencies hinder their effectiveness. The book proposes that structured intermediation – ranging from basic networking to advanced systemic coordination – could rebuild these linkages. Most innovation research focuses on high-tech sectors and radical innovation; this book shifts attention to traditional industries reliant on incremental innovation and tacit knowledge. It proposes a novel framework of intermediation, offering a roadmap for policymakers. Any such roadmap requires sectoral differentiation, rejecting one-size-fits-all policies. In addition, there is a need for state capability-building (enhancing public-sector intermediation skills), firm engagement (encouraging large firms to share knowledge and small firms to embrace collective learning), and reforming intermediaries (shifting from bureaucratic compliance to dynamic, network-driven roles). The insights provided by Linking Education and the Local Economy is of interest to academics and researchers, particularly those in innovation studies, industrial pol
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