Doctoral Degrees (Agricultural Economics)
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Browsing Doctoral Degrees (Agricultural Economics) by Subject "Canned fruit industry -- South Africa"
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- ItemAn enquiry into the competitive performance of the South African deciduous fruit canning industry(Stellenbosch : Stellenbosch University, 2024-03) Jantjies, Heinrich; Van Rooyen, Johan; Stellenbosch University. Faculty of AgriSciences. Dept. of Agricultural Economics.ENGLISH SUMMARY: This study investigated theoretical constructs to best define, measure and analyse competitive performance of the South African deciduous fruit industry, focusing on the canning/processing function. The enquiry stretches from early 1960s to the early 2020s. This represents a long-term perspective with various factors impacting on industry competitiveness, including the global oil crises, mid 1970s; political-economic sanctions, 1980s; democratisation and economic deregulation, 1990s; the financial crises and economic meltdown of 2008/9; the recent Covid pandemic; and international strife and wars. The study was grounded in new trade theory (NTT), the competitive advantage concept, and the Porter diamond model, which was extended in the study to include international trade and socio-economic transformation factors impacting the South African deciduous fruit industry. This new theoretical construct was referred to as the Porter 7 model, containing seven determinants of competitiveness. A constructivist enquiry approach was applied, employing ‘mixed method’ data gathering and analysis through qualitative and quantitative approaches. Conventional approaches to qualitatively measure competitive performance – RCA, revealed comparative advantage and RTA, relative trade advantage – were complemented by the more recent normalised revealed comparative advantage (NRCA) and extended to a newly developed application, the normalised relative trade advantage (NRTA). The analysis focused on global, industry and firm level applications. Competitiveness is defined as “the sustained ability of an industry to attract investment by trading products in the global marketplace, whilst continuously striving to earn returns greater than the opportunity cost of scarce resources engaged”. This definition allows for comparisons with direct competitors and alternative industries. The quantitative measurements showed that the South African deciduous fruit canning industry globally sustains highly competitive performance – out-performed only by Greece and Chile. It also consistently outperforms other competing South African sub-sectors such as wine and horticultural crops. Recently however, since 2015, a decline has been recorded for the industry. Through surveys and Delphi sessions with industry executives and experts, 134 factors impacting competitiveness were identified and rated on a five-point Likert scale. The rated factors were grouped into the seven determinants of the Porter 7 model. The two most enhancing determinants were “business strategy, structure and rivalry” and “related and supporting industries”. Factors related to “government support and policy” and “transformation and social development” were viewed as constraining. Upon reviewing the qualitative and quantitative results, the study concludes that the competitive landscape for the South African deciduous fruit canning industry is competitive but has been becoming less so from 2015 onwards. Twenty-seven industry-level strategic proposals have been formulated to enhance competitive performance. An institutional structure to improve industry-based dialogue and structured private-public interactions is recommended, supported by an improved strategic intelligence database and “dashboard”, tracking competitiveness performance, linking into the recently accepted National Agriculture Processing Master Plan. Major focus areas for improved sustained competitiveness are listed as emerging markets; the institutionalising of a participative “deciduous fruit canning industry competitiveness strategy (DFCCS)”; improved value chain collaboration; dealing with social transformation; technological innovation; and gaining productive trade agreements. An agenda for continued research in institutional structure and value chain strategy is proposed.