A new paper on African industrialisation "The Art of Upgrading Industrial Policymaking Itself", released by the African Trade Programme at the LSE Firoz Lalji Institute for Africa and supported by ARISE Industrial Platforms Ltd (ARISE IIP), argues that successful African industrialisation in the twenty-first century will be different to the East Asian experiences of the twentieth century.
Under the guidance of David Luke, Professor in Practice, LSE Firoz Lalji Institute of Africa by Jamie Macleod, Policy Fellow at the LSE Firoz Lalji Institute for Africa and Olawale Ogunkola, Professor of Economics, University of Ibadan, the paper claims that there is no single "the model" or "golden policy template" towards industrialisation, instead what matters is the approach and process by a committed developmental state including "experimenting and learning" to craft appropriate interventions.
This first requires an understanding of the "big five" industrialisation issues of today: policy consensus, green industrialisation, supply chain security and resiliency, shifting industrialisation paradigms, and widening policy space. But most importantly industrial policymaking in Africa itself must upgraded to become more adaptive, collaborative, and consultative, while bringing together government, anchor investors, and donors, into a grand bargain for social and environmentally sustainable industrialisation.