Arce and business to seek an accommodation in Bolivia

Significance President Luis Arce will seek to steer a consensual policy with respect to Bolivia’s business community, despite attacking some members of the former interim presidency of Jeanine Anez. The private sector saw its access to the state improve under Anez, but suffered from the downturn in domestic demand prompted by the COVID-19 pandemic. Impacts Fiscal austerity will limit the government’s room for manoeuvre in dealing with the private sector. Arce will need to balance agricultural export priorities with food needs in the domestic market. Divides are likely to persist between business interests in Santa Cruz and the rest of the country.

Author(s):  
Hongyan Yang ◽  
H. Kevin Steensma ◽  
Ting Ren

Purpose This paper aims to study how state ownership influences the innovation process in terms of allocating resources toward searching for new solutions and converting these efforts into economic value. On one hand, deep pockets of the state provide slack resources that may facilitate risk taking and innovation. On the other hand, soft budgets can create incentive problems and dampen the efficient use of resources. The authors suggest how accounting for competitive context can disentangle these countervailing forces. Design/methodology/approach The authors use a panel of over 240,000 Chinese firms over the years 2004–2008. The broad sample and period afforded substantial variability in terms of state ownership within and across firms. The authors use a two-stage model and a within-firm (i.e. fixed-effects) design, controlling for all time-invariant firm characteristics and the problematic unobserved heterogeneity that can often lead to erroneous inferences. Furthermore, the relatively short window limits the likelihood of time-varying unobserved firm characteristics biasing the empirical results. Findings The authors found that private-sector competition has the opposite effect on the relationship between state ownership and the second step of the innovation process. In industries where there is robust private-sector competition, state ownership diminishes the firm’s ability to convert R&D efforts into economic value. Private-sector competition competes away any advantages state-owned firms may have in terms of developing or accessing the complementary resources needed for commercialization. Ultimately, the inefficiencies of state ownership in terms of relatively undisciplined selection and monitoring of R&D activities outweigh any potential resource advantages derived from state ownership. Originality/value The state remains a prominent player in many economies throughout the world. The authors explored how state ownership of firms influences the resources they expend in searching out new solutions, and their success in converting such resources into economically valuable new products and services. State ownership has potentially countervailing effects on innovation. The authors disentangle these countervailing effects through consideration of how accounting for competitive context could determine whether the beneficial effects of state ownership dominate its detrimental effects for both searching for new solutions and converting these efforts into economically valuable new products. With a focus of market competition as an external force that drives the difference in innovation between SOEs and the private-sector, this study serves as a parallel effort to Jia et al. (2019) who investigate the joint effect of public and corporate governance on SOEs’ innovation performance, and Zhou et al. (2017) who concern the balance of the institution and efficiency logics on the comparative advantage of SOEs over privately owned enterprises in innovation performance.


Subject Problems in India's banking sector. Significance The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) earlier this month stepped in to rescue imperilled Yes Bank. The private sector lender had accumulated a high level of bad debt. Impacts Indian borrowers will be increasingly distrustful of shadow banks as well as banks. The State Bank of India could come under strain owing to its need to support Yes Bank financially. The RBI will come under growing pressure to improve its regulatory oversight of the banking sector.


2017 ◽  
Vol 7 (4) ◽  
pp. 408-422 ◽  
Author(s):  
Khotso Tsotsotso ◽  
Elizabeth Montshiwa ◽  
Precious Tirivanhu ◽  
Tebogo Fish ◽  
Siyabonga Sibiya ◽  
...  

Purpose The purpose of this paper is to improve the understanding of the drivers and determinants of skills demand in South Africa, given the country’s history and its current design as a developmental state. Design/methodology/approach In this study, a mixed methods approach is used. The study draws information from in-depth interviews with transport sector stakeholders including employers, professional bodies, sector regulatory bodies and training providers. Complementary to the interviews, the study also analyses employer-reported workplace skills plans from 1,094 transport sector firms updated annually. A Heckman correction model is applied. Findings The study finds that changes in competition, technology, ageing employees, market conditions and government regulations are among the most frequently stated determinants reported through interviews. Using a Heckman regression model, the study identifies eight determining factors, which include location of firm, size of a firm, occupation type, racial and generational transformation, subsector of the firm, skills alignment to National Qualification Framework, reason for skills scarcity and level of skills scarcity reported. The South African transport sector skills demand is therefore mainly driven by the country’s history and consequently its current socio-economic policies as applied by the state itself. Research limitations/implications Wage rates are explored during stakeholder interviews and the study suggests that wage rates are an insignificant determinant of skills demand in the South African transport sector. However, due to poor reporting by firms, wage rates did not form a part of the quantitative analysis of the study. This serves as a limitation of the study. Practical implications Through this research, it is now clear that the state has more determining power (influence) in the transport sector than it was perceived. The state can use its power to be a more effective enabler towards increasing employer participation in skills development of the sector. Social implications With increased understanding and awareness of state’s influence in the sector, the country’s mission to redress the social ills of the former state on black South Africans stands a better chance of success. Private sector resources can be effectively mobilized to improve the social state of previously disadvantaged South Africans. However, given the economic dominance of the private sector and its former role in the apartheid era in South Africa; too much state influence in a supposedly free market can result in corporate resistance and consequently, market failure which can be seen as result of political interference. Originality/value South Africa has had an unprecedented social and economic trajectory to date. This said, its economic and social policies are unlike what we have observed before. Thus, identification of determinants and understanding of mechanisms of influence, on skills demand in the sector in which an African state plays such a close and active role, is in itself a unique contribution to knowledge and compels us to revisit our traditional assumptions about market behaviour. This study is one of the very few of its kind in the labour market research with a South African context.


Significance The economic power of both Santa Cruz (Bolivia) and Guayaquil (Ecuador) has long had important and sometimes destabilising impacts on national politics. Ecuador and Bolivia are unusual in Latin America in the strength of regional political pressures. Impacts Regionalism will remain more confrontational in Bolivia than in Ecuador. Arce will broadly respect the economic autonomy of Santa Cruz and avoid confrontational policies such as land reform. A Lasso presidency in Ecuador would reassure the business community and strengthen a liberal economic regime.


Subject Military business interests and economic reform in Myanmar. Significance The National League for Democracy (NLD) wants to enable greater competition in Myanmar's business environment. Foreign attention is focused on the prospects for private sector development, privatisation of state-owned enterprises and the role 'crony-owned' conglomerates will play. However, military-owned businesses also need to be factored in -- both in regards as to whether they are 'crowding out' the private sector and whether the military itself will constrain business sector reform. Impacts The military's economic interests do not cover all sectors; earlier reform may be possible in non-military areas. A political tussle is likely over NLD plans to rebalance public spending. According to its manifesto, the NLD will broaden Myanmar's tax base while lowering taxes.


Significance This campaign is part of a broader escalation of cyberattacks that aim to generate financial and non-financial rewards for the state. Impacts North Korea has no incentive to cease its financially and strategically motivated cybersecurity attacks. New sanctions on Pyongyang due to its cyberattacks could in turn increase the incentive to conduct further attacks to generate funds. Private sector and public sector targets have growing need to adapt and secure themselves against increasingly sophisticated campaigns. Since malware spread is unpredictable, organisations need to combine cyber defences with robust post-attack recovery protocols.


Significance In many countries, the increasing willingness of governments to outsource the provision of public services has created new interfaces between the state and the private sector and new challenges for holding service providers to account. In developing countries, these trends also raise deeper concerns about sovereignty and legitimacy. Impacts Maximum transparency will be needed about how contracts are awarded and executed to avoid corruption risks. The funds available to private companies will allow them to buy in legal expertise to ensure more favourable contract terms. EU member countries need to reform national law by March 2016 to align with the new procurement directive.


Subject Kazakhstan's oil extraction sector. Significance Kazakh Energy Minister Kanat Bozumbayev announced on February 8 that oil production was expected to fall to 89.5 million tonnes this year from 90.3 million tonnes last year. Bozumbayev attributed the dip to scheduled shutdowns at three major oilfields, which will help Kazakhstan meet its commitment to cut output as agreed with OPEC members and non-members. Impacts The long-expected initial public offering of shares in the state-owned KazMunayGaz has been postponed beyond 2019. Refined products output is planned to exceed 12 million tonnes this year, based on a 5% year-on-year rise in the volume of crude processed. With domestic demand expected to be met for the first time, Kazakhstan will start exporting fuel to its Central Asian neighbours this year.


Subject The influence of the business sector. Significance President Martin Vizcarra’s government’s qualified decision to give the green light to Tia Maria, a large copper project, is a response to strong lobbying by Peru’s business community. However, it risks inflaming regional protests by affected farmers in the southern region of Arequipa. This long-running dispute has become emblematic of conflicting development strategies, particularly given Peru’s failure in recent years to diversify its economy away from extractive industries. Impacts Southern Peru will need to change its corporate social responsibility policies if it is to regain public trust. A minority in the Tambo valley will continue to rally opposition to the project. The left will seek to reassert itself using defence of the environment as a political banner.


Significance The economy, however, is in dire straits. Widespread shortages of everyday supplies are reminiscent of the crisis that followed collapse of the Soviet Union in the 1990s. Economic policy likewise has echoes of the past, with the government pursuing partial re-dollarisation. Impacts With dollarisation likely to spread to more sectors of the economy, the CUC faces a gradual demise. Parts of the private sector catering to domestic demand, such as transport, might benefit from relaxed regulations. The crisis might drive the state to turn over more services to the non-state sector.


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