South Africa Economic Update, November 2011 [electronic resource] : Focus on Green Growth.
Material type: TextSeries: Economic Updates and Modeling | World Bank e-LibraryPublication details: Washington, D.C. : The World Bank, 2011Subject(s): Agricultural Subsidies | Agriculture | Air Pollution | Bonds | Capital Costs | Capital Markets | Carbon Emissions | Carbon Intensity | Clean Air | Clean Water | Climate | Climate Change | Climate Change Mitigation and Green House Gases | Coal | Commercial Banks | Consumers | Currencies and Exchange Rates | Debt | Deforestation | Developed Countries | Economic Conditions and Volatility | Economic Costs | Economic Forecasting | Economic Growth | Economic Recovery | Economies of Scale | Electricity | Emissions | Energy | Energy Consumption | Energy Efficiency | Energy Intensity | Energy Production | Energy Production and Transportation | Energy Subsidies | Energy Supply | Environment | Environmental Economics & Policies | Environmental Policy | Environmental Regulation | Exchange Rates | Expenditures | Finance and Financial Sector Development | Financial Sector | Financial Services | Fiscal Policy | Foreign Direct Investment | Fossil Fuels | Gdp | Green Issues | Greenhouse Gases | Gross National Income | Household Consumption | Human Capital | Inflation | Macroeconomics and Economic Growth | Monetary Policy | Natural Gas | Nuclear Power | Power Generation | Power Plants | Property Rights | Purchasing Power | Recycling | Renewable Energy | Risk Aversion | Supply Side | Trade Barriers | Trade Policy | UnemploymentOnline resources: Click here to access online Abstract: The global financial roller coaster, with the Euro zone as its lead car, has hit economic prospects across the globe. The South African economy, with its close links to the world economy, has suffered, too, resulting in weakened growth prospects, lower fiscal revenues, lower and more volatile valuation of the rand, and dampened external financing. This further compounds the policy challenges facing the authorities, on top of their preoccupation with unyielding unemployment, which requires higher and more inclusive economic growth. Policymaking is also conditioned by a growing recognition that future growth needs to be less carbon-intensive. As elsewhere, opportunities in green economies are viewed with keen interest, as a way of simultaneously targeting a cleaner environment and stimulating innovation, growth, and job creation. While green policies can have large synergies and co-benefits with the growth and employment agenda, they are not a substitute for it. Indeed, such synergies are likely to be mutually enhancing and larger when the growth and environment objectives are being pursued by multiple, well-targeted and coordinated policies.The global financial roller coaster, with the Euro zone as its lead car, has hit economic prospects across the globe. The South African economy, with its close links to the world economy, has suffered, too, resulting in weakened growth prospects, lower fiscal revenues, lower and more volatile valuation of the rand, and dampened external financing. This further compounds the policy challenges facing the authorities, on top of their preoccupation with unyielding unemployment, which requires higher and more inclusive economic growth. Policymaking is also conditioned by a growing recognition that future growth needs to be less carbon-intensive. As elsewhere, opportunities in green economies are viewed with keen interest, as a way of simultaneously targeting a cleaner environment and stimulating innovation, growth, and job creation. While green policies can have large synergies and co-benefits with the growth and employment agenda, they are not a substitute for it. Indeed, such synergies are likely to be mutually enhancing and larger when the growth and environment objectives are being pursued by multiple, well-targeted and coordinated policies.
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