Infrastructure will not necessarily guarantee economic transformation: Spending significant resources on infrastructure will not necessarily lead to economic growth that is underpinned by economic transformation
In recent his state of the nation speech, President Zuma spoke about the massive infrastructure spend that the government will be embarking on. The question we need to ask is: does infrastructure spend lead to economic growth and transformation?
A number of studies have been done internationally and it has been widely settled that infrastructure spend does lead to economic growth, eventually. However, for this growth to be achievable, other things must happen in order to increase the probability of infrastructure expenditure to make a sustainable impact on any economy.
One thing that is evident is that the infrastructure spend that South Africa undertook for the 2010 World Cup created temporary jobs but has not led to any significant changes to this economy. Money was made but for whom?
In his talk on the causes of economic growth in China, MIT and Fudan University professor Yasheng Huang, an authority on how to get ahead in emerging economies, talks about how infrastructure development in not necessarily a cause of economic growth but is rather result of a growing economy.