Publication: From Regulators to Enablers: Role of City Governments in Economic Development of Greater Kampala
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2017-09
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2017-10-05
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This report is the second major analysis on urbanization in Uganda by the World Bank after the 5th Econ Update - The Growth Challenge: Can Ugandan Cities Get to Work’. The report aims to provide Ugandan policymakers with economic analyses on the role of Greater Kampala in achieving Uganda’s economic goals outlined in Vision 2040, and the actions needed to unlock the city’s economic potential. While Greater Kampala accounts for only about 10% of Uganda’s population, it generates a third of the country’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP) and employs 46 percent of its formal workers. The report calls on the city governments that make up the Greater Kampala Metropolitan Area to transition from “regulators to enablers” of economic development, through investing in: 1. Transport – coordinated transport and economic infrastructure to improve mobility and increase access to markets. 2. Land and serviced premises – strengthen land use management and access to serviced premises in partnership with large landowners. 3. Skills and business services – partner with the private sector to provide support services to local firms. And none of this can be achieved without strong coordination among Government stakeholders in the GKMA and with the private sector.
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“World Bank. 2017. From Regulators to Enablers: Role of City Governments in Economic Development of Greater Kampala. © World Bank. http://hdl.handle.net/10986/28459 License: CC BY 3.0 IGO.”
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