The Mercury

Toyota Wessels Institute heralds new dawn for SA economy

- ROY COKAYNE roy.cokayne@inl.co.za

THE INDUSTRIAL­ISATION of South Africa’s economy and deepening of the manufactur­ing sector has received a boost with the official opening of a focused manufactur­ing institute in KwaZulu-Natal.

Called the Toyota Wessels Institute for Manufactur­ing Studies (Twims), it has been establishe­d in Kloof in Durban with R50 million in grant funding from the Toyota South Africa Educationa­l Trust, which received its seed funding from the Wessels family and Toyota Motor Corporatio­n of Japan.

The trust was establishe­d by the late Dr Albert Wessels, the founder of Toyota South Africa Motors.

Johan van Zyl, the president and chief executive of Toyota Europe, said yesterday that the official opening was a very special day for a small group of people who had been working on this project for many years.

Van Zyl said it was a known fact that the contributi­on of manufactur­ing to the South African economy had been deteriorat­ing during the past 25 years from 21 percent in 1995 to 13 percent of gross domestic product today.

He said this situation had been recognised by the South African government and the re-establishm­ent and strengthen­ing of the manufactur­ing sector had been identified as one of the key strategies in the National Developmen­t Plan.

“The manufactur­ing sector can make a substantia­l contributi­on towards economic growth, narrowing the inequality gap and job creation, due to its forward and backward linkages in the economy,” he said.

Van Zyl added that for every R1 invested in manufactur­ing, there was R1 of total value addition to the economy.

But Van Zyl stressed that one of the key success factors for manufactur­ers and the manufactur­ing sector was skilled managers who could create and lead competitiv­e manufactur­ing operations.

“The trustees of the Toyota Educationa­l Foundation recognised the need for manufactur­ing focused executive and management developmen­t if South Africa and African manufactur­ers were to realise their potential and contribute to regional economic developmen­t and social transforma­tion,” he said.

Van Zyl said that the institute would be run on a non-profit basis with any surplus generated used to fund campus improvemen­ts and a scholarshi­p programme

South Africans.

Trade and industry minister Rob Davies said although his department did not have anything to do with the rollout of the institute programme, it did express its support, because it saw a need for much more strategic thinking about manufactur­ing in the country.

Davies said that they had concluded quite a number of years ago that industrial­isation and adding value to products was the only way for South Africa to go as a country.

“We are not going to get richer as a country unless we move up the value chain and unless we have higher levels of value addition.

“The proportion of a final product that anyone is consuming that is constitute­d by the raw materials in it, is not only the smallest part of it, but also a declining percentage of the

for

black final product.

“So if we are going to be trapped in the global division of labour as producers and exporters of primary products, we are going to be trapped in the least lucrative part of the value chain.

“That is the lesson we need to learn and that we need move up the value chain,” he said.

Davies added that making things was going to require higher levels of skill for those who worked in factories and from those who led industrial processes.

He said there was a need for a deep manufactur­ing culture and an institute like Twims that was focused on manufactur­ing could help in deepening manufactur­ing in the country.

Professor Justin Barnes, the new executive director of Twims, said a team of leading academics had developed the manufactur­ing-focused curriculum and the Gordon Institute of Business Studies would next year be offering a manufactur­ing focused masters in business administra­tion and post graduate diploma in business administra­tion at the new facility.

Barnes said Twims would also facilitate and host a number of non-academic programmes, including executive developmen­t programmes, short certificat­ion courses, specialist conference­s and thought leadership seminars.

He added that Twims aimed to become the hub for manufactur­ing research in Africa, and to achieve this was creating dedicated research fellows and facilitati­ng links with manufactur­ing research centres across the world.

“We believe manufactur­ing holds the key to the long-term, sustainabl­e developmen­t of the South African and African economy,” he said.

 ?? Supplied ?? JOHAN van Zyl, president and chief executive of Toyota Europe, said the Twims opening was very special for the few who had been working on the project for many years. |
Supplied JOHAN van Zyl, president and chief executive of Toyota Europe, said the Twims opening was very special for the few who had been working on the project for many years. |

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