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Haroon Bhorat

Haroon Bhorat is Professor of Economics and Director of the Development Policy Research Unit (DPRU)[1] at the University of Cape Town.[2] His area of research has concentrated on labour economics and poverty/income distribution mainly in his native South Africa, and recently, been expanded to other parts of Africa - in which he is world-renowned authority.

Haroon Bhorat
Born
Roodepoort, South Africa
Academic career
FieldDevelopment economics
Labour economics
Alma materUniversity of Cape Town (BA)
Stellenbosch University (MA) (Ph.D.)

Early life and education edit

Bhorat was born in Roodepoort, a mining town in Gauteng province, South Africa. He attended school at Diocesan College (Bishops) in Cape Town before achieving a BA (Honours) in Economics from University of Cape Town in 1991.[3] He completed the coursework component of a Master of Economics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1992, then proceeded to obtain a master's degree and Ph.D., in Economics from Stellenbosch University in 1996 and 2003 respectively.[3][4]

Career edit

Haroon Bhorat is Professor of Economics, and the Director of the Development Policy Research Unit (DPRU), a university-recognized research unit located within the School of Economics at the University of Cape Town, South Africa. He holds an National Research Foundation (South Africa) B2 rating,[5] and with a total citation estimate of over 7700 and an h-index of 47 (as at October 2021),[6] he is one of the most cited South African economists globally.

He is active on Twitter[7] and features regularly on the DPRU's Facebook[8] and YouTube[9] accounts.

Appointments and memberships edit

Bhorat is a member of the South African Presidential Economic Advisory Council (PEAC),[10] announced by President Cyril Ramaphosa in the 2019 State of the Nation Address (South Africa), to ensure greater coherence and consistency in the implementation of economic policy and ensure that government and society in general is better equipped to respond to changing economic circumstances. Bhorat also advised previous Presidents Thabo Mbeki and Kgalema Motlanthe on economic matters, formally serving on the Presidential Economic Advisory Panel. Bhorat was the Minister of Labour's appointee on the Employment Conditions Commission (ECC) – the country's minimum wage setting body. He is a member of the Statistics Council of South Africa. He has served as advisor to the South African National Treasury, and former South African Minister of Finance, Pravin Gordhan. He has undertaken extensive work for several South African government departments – most notably the Department of Employment and Labour and the Presidency, including an appointment as Advisor on the South African Parliament's High Level Panel on Acceleration of Change and Transformation.[11]

He joined the IZA as Research Fellow in January 2013[12] and is a regular IZA World of Labor contributor.[13] In 2013/4 he was invited to be a Non-resident Senior Fellow [14] at Brookings affiliated to the Global Economy and Development programme, and working on the Africa Growth Initiative (AGI). Bhorat was inducted to the UCT College of Fellows in 2021.[15]

Bhorat consults for a number of supranational organisations such as the World Bank, the UNDP, and the ILO, Ratings Agencies and emerging market fund managers. He is an Advisory Board Member for the UNU World Institute for Development Economics Research (UNU-WIDER),[16] Executive Committee Member for the International Economic Association (IEA),[17] a member of the ILO's Global Research Reference Group (RRG), a member of Board of Directors for Partnership for Economic Policy (PEP).[18] He sat on the advisory board of the UNDP's 2019 and 2020 Human Development Reports, and was a member of the World Bank's advisory board of the Commission on Global Poverty,[19] as well as a member of the Program Committee of the 2017 International Economic Association (IEA) World Congress.[20]

He is a member on the Advisory Committee of the joint United Nations and World Bank Policy Study on the role of Development in the Prevention of Violent Conflict.[21] He also sits on the UN/WHO's High Level Commission on Health Employment and Economic Growth.[22] Haroon previously served as a member of the UN Commission on Legal Empowerment of the Poor (LEP),[23] and was Head of Research for the UN's High-Level Panel on the Post-2015 Development Agenda.[24]

Prof. Bhorat holds the DST/NRF SARChI Chair in Economic Growth, Poverty and Inequality Research.[25] He also served as a Social Sciences jury member for the Infosys Prize 2020.[26]

Academic contributions edit

Bhorat's work has three key discernable strands: Firstly there is a long-standing focus on the empirics of household poverty and inequality dynamics in South Africa. Secondly, a consistent and expansive research programme for a period close on 25 years - on developing country labour markets. Thirdly, and possibly much more recently – has been a relatively new avenue of research on trying to undertake applied work in the area of economic complexity. In each of the strands, his modus operandi, is the application of econometric techniques to large survey datasets.

Serving in a variety of public roles ranging from high-level advisory work for government departments and multi-lateral institutions, to giving public lectures and seminar presentations at the world's leading universities (including for example Columbia University, Cornell University, Yale University and University of Oxford), Bhorat's ability to seamlessly switch between conducting hard empirical analysis and providing evidence-based policy advice that is accessible to a broader audience, has had a direct impact on the discipline. His research feeds into policy decisions and pronouncements at the highest level, including Cabinet memoranda, State of the Nation Address (South Africa) and legislative promulgation. His work has been hugely influential in policy making in respect of poverty, inequality and labour market issues in South Africa.

Bhorat and the DPRU have become the international focal point for African work on understanding the impact of minimum wages in the region.[27] Hence the South African National Minimum Wage Commission[28] have requested Prof Bhorat and his team undertake the impact analysis of the National Minimum Wage (NMW) (2020-2021). This work uses innovative econometric techniques, combining a Difference in differences with a Regression discontinuity design. In addition, minimum wage analysis is being done for Mauritius, the Comoros, and other African countries. He is widely considered to be one of the leading experts in the world on understanding minimum wages and their impact in the developing country context. This research has elicited a significant debate and discussion within the academic and policy community and the ongoing body of work is viewed as a novel intellectual contribution to the South African, and arguably developing country, literature.

This work on minimum wages has also been extended via the development of a Multiple Index of Violation (MVI).[29] The MVI is a novel index used to measure the extent and depth of minimum wage violation, and includes non-wage measures of violation. The MVI involves applying the Alkire-Foster method of measuring multi-dimensional poverty and also using principal components to robustness check the measure (see British Journal of Industrial Relations article[30]). The MVI has now been applied globally in 24 countries around the world.

His early work on poverty and inequality dynamics, much of it in collaboration with Professor Murray Leibbrandt, served as the first empirical work on post-apartheid survey datasets examining poverty and inequality dynamics in South Africa. It is fair to say that this body of work - which garnered the Alan Pifer book Award [31] and spawned a series of journal articles - has served as the intellectual seedbed for all the future empirical work by economists, on poverty and inequality issues in South Africa. Some of his earliest research involved a series of studies conducted with Murray Leibbrandt and Prof Ingrid Woolard, that used covariates such as race, gender, education and location as a good predictor of vulnerability in the South African labour market.[32][33]

Bhorat has also conducted research on Sub-Saharan Africa economies' labour markets, where he finds a largely unenforced minimum wage laws riddled with complexity and vagueness.[34] Furthermore, the study finds that the minimum wage levels within Sub-Saharan Africa seem to be set at various levels relative to median wages, with largely negative impacts on employment levels within African countries. His rich vein of research on labour markets in South Africa rank him possibly as the best known economist working on South African labour market issues. His work has ranged from estimated the gender pay gap in South Africa, to a more careful econometric assessment of the contribution of union membership to wages across the distribution. Most notably though, he was at the forefront of the debates in the early 2000s around labour regulation in South Africa, using his multiple publications to build an empirical argument for estimating the level of labour regulation in South Africa. More recently, and in keeping with Bhorat's attempt to remain at the forefront of trying to analyse changing labour market dynamics in South Africa, he has sought to understand the phenomenon of wage polarisation in South Africa. Using a combination of unique data-sets as well as fairly novel econometric techniques, this work feeds into the global labour market literature on how the task content of occupations are fundamentally changing the nature of work as well as the returns to employment.

Bhorat was also a key player in the first example of inter-disciplinary academic analysis focused on the emerging Shadow State and institutionalised corruption in South Africa, purposefully targeted at a non-academic audience. “Betrayal of the Promise: How South Africa is Being Stolen”[35] was produced by a number of academics, under the banner of the State Capacity Research Group.[36] This report on state capture in South Africa, was made publicly available in mid-2017, aiming to contribute to an analytically clear, and academically rigorous, treatment of institutionalised corruption in South Africa – and contributing to the public debate about ‘State capture’. Prof. Bhorat and a select group of DPRU researchers then started work on related projects such as: “State Capture and the Economics of Corruption” and “Removing Corruption in State-Owned Enterprises in South Africa: Towards An Action Plan”. The research aimed to situate the case of South Africa within the relevant literature, and critically assess how to define what has taken place. They focused on the central role that State-owned enterprises (SOEs) have played given their prominence in the SA economy and their location at the interface between the State and the private sector. The research team used the Worldwide Governance Indicators (WGI) and analysed governance, taking a more detailed empirical approach informed by their access to data.

Bibliography edit

Edited books edit

These are some of Bhorat's edited books:

  • Better Choices for South Africa, FORTHCOMING. Co-edited with Mcebisi Jonas and Greg Mills; Brenthurst Foundation, South Africa.
  • Haroon Bhorat; Buthelezi, M.; Chipkin, I.; Duma, S.; Friedenstein, H.; Mondi, L.; Peter, C.; Prins, N.; Qobo, M.; Swilling, M. (2018). Shadow State: The Politics of State Capture. Wits University Press. p. 176. ISBN 9781776142149.
  • Haroon Bhorat; Conceição, P.; Cornia, G.A.; Odusola, A., eds. (2017). Income Inequality Trends in sub-Saharan Africa: Divergence, determinants and consequences. United Nations Development Programme. p. 436. ISBN 9789211264241.
  • Haroon Bhorat; Finn Tarp, eds. (2016). Africa's Lions: Growth Traps and Opportunities for Six African Economies. Brookings Institution Press. p. 270. ISBN 9780815729495.
  • Haroon Bhorat; Ravi Kanbur, eds. (2006). Poverty and Policy in Post- Apartheid South Africa. [HSRC Press]. p. 512. ISBN 9780796921222.
  • Haroon Bhorat; Murray Leibbrandt; Muzi Maziya; Servaas Van Der Berg; Ingrid Woolard, eds. (2001). Fighting Poverty: Labour Markets and Inequality in South Africa. [Juta and Company Ltd]. p. 252. ISBN 9781919713625.

Book chapters edit

Bhorat has authored (or co-authored) over 50 book chapters. To read the full list, please visit his CV[37]

Journal articles edit

Bhorat has written more than 30 refereed journal articles including:

  • Haroon Bhorat; Morne Oosthuizen; Benjamin Stanwix (2021). "Social Assistance Amidst the Covid-19 Epidemic in South Africa: A Policy Assessment". South African Journal of Economics. 89 (1): 63–81. doi:10.1111/saje.12277. ISSN 0038-2280.
  • Haroon Bhorat; Ravi Kanbur; Benjamin Stanwix; Amy Thornton (2020). "Measuring Multidimensional Labour Law Violation, With an Application to South Africa". British Journal of Industrial Relations. 59 (3): 928–961. doi:10.1111/bjir.12580.
  • Haroon Bhorat; Ravi Kanbur; Benjamin Stanwix (2019). "Compliance with labor laws in developing countries". IZA World of Labor. 2 (1). doi:10.15185/izawol.80.v2. hdl:10419/206584.
  • Haroon Bhorat; Ravi Kanbur; Benjamin Stanwix (2017). "Minimum wages in sub-Saharan Africa: A primer". The World Bank Research Observer. 31 (2): lkw007. doi:10.1093/wbro/lkw007. hdl:10986/30139.
  • Haroon Bhorat; Ravi Kanbur; Natasha Mayet (2013). "The impact of sectoral minimum wage laws on employment, wages, and hours of work in South Africa". IZA Journal of Labor & Development. 2 (1). doi:10.1186/2193-9020-2-1. hdl:10.1186/2193-9020-2-1.
  • Haroon Bhorat; Murray Leibbrandt; Ingrid Woolard (2000). "Understanding contemporary household inequality in South Africa". Journal for Studies in Economic and Econometrics. 24 (3): 31–52. doi:10.1080/03796205.2000.12129275. hdl:11427/7246. S2CID 53599919.
  • Haroon Bhorat; James Hodge (1999). "Decomposing Shifts in Labour Demand in South Africa". South African Journal of Economics. 67 (3): 155–168. doi:10.1111/j.1813-6982.1999.tb01146.x.

He was also a guest editor for IZA Journal of Labor & Development, with Ravi Kanbur and Li Shi, for the Special Collection, titled "Thematic series on Reforming Minimum Wage and Labor Regulation Policies in Developing Economies"[38] in 2016.

Other publications edit

Bhorat has published more than 20 non-refereed journal articles, 36 collaborative working papers, 63 DPRU working papers, 10 DPRU policy briefs, and more than 100 research reports. He regularly publishes blogs, book reviews, analysis pieces and Op-eds in the media, and is frequently interviewed and cited by the press. Many of his presentations in webinars, conferences and other invited speaking engagements, are available online.

References edit

  1. ^ "DPRU". Retrieved 23 August 2021.
  2. ^ "Professor Haroon Bhorat". Retrieved 19 January 2018.
  3. ^ a b "Haroon Bhorat" (PDF). (PDF) from the original on 20 January 2018. Retrieved 18 January 2018.
  4. ^ "Haroon Bhorat". 11 February 2016. Retrieved 19 January 2018.
  5. ^ "NRF Rating". Retrieved 21 October 2021.
  6. ^ "GoogleScholar". Retrieved 21 October 2021.
  7. ^ "Twitter @HaroonBhorat". Retrieved 21 October 2021.
  8. ^ "DPRU Facebook". Facebook. Retrieved 21 October 2021.
  9. ^ "DPRU YouTube". YouTube. Retrieved 21 October 2021.
  10. ^ "President appoints Economic Advisory Council". Retrieved 17 August 2021.
  11. ^ "South African Parliament's HLP on Acceleration of Change and Transformation" (PDF). Retrieved 21 October 2021.
  12. ^ "Haroon Bhorat Research Fellow". Retrieved 19 January 2018.
  13. ^ "IZA Contributors". Retrieved 9 February 2021.
  14. ^ "Brookings Senior Fellows". Retrieved 17 August 2021.
  15. ^ "UCT College of Fellows new members". Retrieved 17 August 2021.
  16. ^ "UNU WIDER Board". Retrieved 23 August 2021.
  17. ^ "IEA Exec Committee". Retrieved 23 August 2021.
  18. ^ "Member of the Board of the Partnership for Economic Policy". Retrieved 17 August 2021.
  19. ^ "Commission on Global Poverty". Retrieved 21 October 2021.
  20. ^ "IEA 2017 World Congress Mexico". Retrieved 21 October 2021.
  21. ^ "UN and WB Study on Development and Conflict Prevention". Retrieved 21 October 2021.
  22. ^ "HLCommission on Health Employment & Economic Growth" (PDF). Retrieved 21 October 2021.
  23. ^ "UN Commission on Legal Empowerment of the Poor" (PDF). Retrieved 21 October 2021.
  24. ^ "HLP on the Post-2015 Development Agenda" (PDF). Retrieved 21 October 2021.
  25. ^ "South African Research Chairs Initiative (SARChI)". Retrieved 21 October 2021.
  26. ^ "Infosys Prize - Jury 2020". www.infosys-science-foundation.com. Retrieved 9 December 2020.
  27. ^ "Minimum Wage Analysis". Retrieved 5 November 2021.
  28. ^ "National Minimum Wage Commission". Retrieved 5 November 2021.
  29. ^ "MEASURING LABOUR LAW VIOLATION: An application to South Africa" (PDF). Retrieved 21 October 2021.
  30. ^ Bhorat, Haroon; Kanbur, Ravi; Stanwix, Benjamin; Thornton, Amy (2021). "Measuring Multi-Dimensional Labour Law Violation with an Application to South Africa". British Journal of Industrial Relations. 59 (3): 928–961. doi:10.1111/bjir.12580. S2CID 219134767. Retrieved 21 October 2021.
  31. ^ "Alan Pifer Award". Retrieved 5 November 2021.
  32. ^ Haroon Bhorat; Murray Leibbrandt (1999). "Correlates of Vulnerability in the South African Labour Market" (PDF). DPRU Working Paper (99/27).
  33. ^ Haroon Bhorat; Murray Leibbrandt; Ingrid Woolard (1999). "Understanding Contemporary Household Inequality in South Africa". DPRU Working Paper (99/25). doi:10.2139/ssrn.943391. hdl:11427/7246. S2CID 53599919.
  34. ^ Haroon Bhorat; Ravi Kanbur; Benjamin Stanwix (2017). "Minimum Wages in Sub-Saharan Africa: A Primer". The World Bank Research Observer. 32 (1): 21–74. doi:10.1093/wbro/lkw007. hdl:10986/30139.
  35. ^ "Betrayal of the Promise" (PDF). Retrieved 9 November 2021.
  36. ^ "SCRP". Retrieved 9 November 2021.
  37. ^ "DPRU". Retrieved 21 October 2021.
  38. ^ "hematic series on Reforming Minimum Wage and Labor Regulation Policies in Developing Economies". Retrieved 21 October 2021.

External links edit

haroon, bhorat, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, biographical, article, written, like, résumé, please, help, improve, revising, neutral, encycloped. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This biographical article is written like a resume Please help improve it by revising it to be neutral and encyclopedic November 2021 This article is an autobiography or has been extensively edited by the subject or by someone connected to the subject It may need editing to conform to Wikipedia s neutral point of view policy There may be relevant discussion on the talk page November 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message Haroon Bhorat is Professor of Economics and Director of the Development Policy Research Unit DPRU 1 at the University of Cape Town 2 His area of research has concentrated on labour economics and poverty income distribution mainly in his native South Africa and recently been expanded to other parts of Africa in which he is world renowned authority Haroon BhoratBornRoodepoort South AfricaAcademic careerFieldDevelopment economics Labour economicsAlma materUniversity of Cape Town BA Stellenbosch University MA Ph D Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Career 2 1 Appointments and memberships 2 2 Academic contributions 3 Bibliography 3 1 Edited books 3 2 Book chapters 3 3 Journal articles 3 4 Other publications 4 References 5 External linksEarly life and education editBhorat was born in Roodepoort a mining town in Gauteng province South Africa He attended school at Diocesan College Bishops in Cape Town before achieving a BA Honours in Economics from University of Cape Town in 1991 3 He completed the coursework component of a Master of Economics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1992 then proceeded to obtain a master s degree and Ph D in Economics from Stellenbosch University in 1996 and 2003 respectively 3 4 Career editHaroon Bhorat is Professor of Economics and the Director of the Development Policy Research Unit DPRU a university recognized research unit located within the School of Economics at the University of Cape Town South Africa He holds an National Research Foundation South Africa B2 rating 5 and with a total citation estimate of over 7700 and an h index of 47 as at October 2021 6 he is one of the most cited South African economists globally He is active on Twitter 7 and features regularly on the DPRU s Facebook 8 and YouTube 9 accounts Appointments and memberships edit Bhorat is a member of the South African Presidential Economic Advisory Council PEAC 10 announced by President Cyril Ramaphosa in the 2019 State of the Nation Address South Africa to ensure greater coherence and consistency in the implementation of economic policy and ensure that government and society in general is better equipped to respond to changing economic circumstances Bhorat also advised previous Presidents Thabo Mbeki and Kgalema Motlanthe on economic matters formally serving on the Presidential Economic Advisory Panel Bhorat was the Minister of Labour s appointee on the Employment Conditions Commission ECC the country s minimum wage setting body He is a member of the Statistics Council of South Africa He has served as advisor to the South African National Treasury and former South African Minister of Finance Pravin Gordhan He has undertaken extensive work for several South African government departments most notably the Department of Employment and Labour and the Presidency including an appointment as Advisor on the South African Parliament s High Level Panel on Acceleration of Change and Transformation 11 He joined the IZA as Research Fellow in January 2013 12 and is a regular IZA World of Labor contributor 13 In 2013 4 he was invited to be a Non resident Senior Fellow 14 at Brookings affiliated to the Global Economy and Development programme and working on the Africa Growth Initiative AGI Bhorat was inducted to the UCT College of Fellows in 2021 15 Bhorat consults for a number of supranational organisations such as the World Bank the UNDP and the ILO Ratings Agencies and emerging market fund managers He is an Advisory Board Member for the UNU World Institute for Development Economics Research UNU WIDER 16 Executive Committee Member for the International Economic Association IEA 17 a member of the ILO s Global Research Reference Group RRG a member of Board of Directors for Partnership for Economic Policy PEP 18 He sat on the advisory board of the UNDP s 2019 and 2020 Human Development Reports and was a member of the World Bank s advisory board of the Commission on Global Poverty 19 as well as a member of the Program Committee of the 2017 International Economic Association IEA World Congress 20 He is a member on the Advisory Committee of the joint United Nations and World Bank Policy Study on the role of Development in the Prevention of Violent Conflict 21 He also sits on the UN WHO s High Level Commission on Health Employment and Economic Growth 22 Haroon previously served as a member of the UN Commission on Legal Empowerment of the Poor LEP 23 and was Head of Research for the UN s High Level Panel on the Post 2015 Development Agenda 24 Prof Bhorat holds the DST NRF SARChI Chair in Economic Growth Poverty and Inequality Research 25 He also served as a Social Sciences jury member for the Infosys Prize 2020 26 Academic contributions edit Bhorat s work has three key discernable strands Firstly there is a long standing focus on the empirics of household poverty and inequality dynamics in South Africa Secondly a consistent and expansive research programme for a period close on 25 years on developing country labour markets Thirdly and possibly much more recently has been a relatively new avenue of research on trying to undertake applied work in the area of economic complexity In each of the strands his modus operandi is the application of econometric techniques to large survey datasets Serving in a variety of public roles ranging from high level advisory work for government departments and multi lateral institutions to giving public lectures and seminar presentations at the world s leading universities including for example Columbia University Cornell University Yale University and University of Oxford Bhorat s ability to seamlessly switch between conducting hard empirical analysis and providing evidence based policy advice that is accessible to a broader audience has had a direct impact on the discipline His research feeds into policy decisions and pronouncements at the highest level including Cabinet memoranda State of the Nation Address South Africa and legislative promulgation His work has been hugely influential in policy making in respect of poverty inequality and labour market issues in South Africa Bhorat and the DPRU have become the international focal point for African work on understanding the impact of minimum wages in the region 27 Hence the South African National Minimum Wage Commission 28 have requested Prof Bhorat and his team undertake the impact analysis of the National Minimum Wage NMW 2020 2021 This work uses innovative econometric techniques combining a Difference in differences with a Regression discontinuity design In addition minimum wage analysis is being done for Mauritius the Comoros and other African countries He is widely considered to be one of the leading experts in the world on understanding minimum wages and their impact in the developing country context This research has elicited a significant debate and discussion within the academic and policy community and the ongoing body of work is viewed as a novel intellectual contribution to the South African and arguably developing country literature This work on minimum wages has also been extended via the development of a Multiple Index of Violation MVI 29 The MVI is a novel index used to measure the extent and depth of minimum wage violation and includes non wage measures of violation The MVI involves applying the Alkire Foster method of measuring multi dimensional poverty and also using principal components to robustness check the measure see British Journal of Industrial Relations article 30 The MVI has now been applied globally in 24 countries around the world His early work on poverty and inequality dynamics much of it in collaboration with Professor Murray Leibbrandt served as the first empirical work on post apartheid survey datasets examining poverty and inequality dynamics in South Africa It is fair to say that this body of work which garnered the Alan Pifer book Award 31 and spawned a series of journal articles has served as the intellectual seedbed for all the future empirical work by economists on poverty and inequality issues in South Africa Some of his earliest research involved a series of studies conducted with Murray Leibbrandt and Prof Ingrid Woolard that used covariates such as race gender education and location as a good predictor of vulnerability in the South African labour market 32 33 Bhorat has also conducted research on Sub Saharan Africa economies labour markets where he finds a largely unenforced minimum wage laws riddled with complexity and vagueness 34 Furthermore the study finds that the minimum wage levels within Sub Saharan Africa seem to be set at various levels relative to median wages with largely negative impacts on employment levels within African countries His rich vein of research on labour markets in South Africa rank him possibly as the best known economist working on South African labour market issues His work has ranged from estimated the gender pay gap in South Africa to a more careful econometric assessment of the contribution of union membership to wages across the distribution Most notably though he was at the forefront of the debates in the early 2000s around labour regulation in South Africa using his multiple publications to build an empirical argument for estimating the level of labour regulation in South Africa More recently and in keeping with Bhorat s attempt to remain at the forefront of trying to analyse changing labour market dynamics in South Africa he has sought to understand the phenomenon of wage polarisation in South Africa Using a combination of unique data sets as well as fairly novel econometric techniques this work feeds into the global labour market literature on how the task content of occupations are fundamentally changing the nature of work as well as the returns to employment Bhorat was also a key player in the first example of inter disciplinary academic analysis focused on the emerging Shadow State and institutionalised corruption in South Africa purposefully targeted at a non academic audience Betrayal of the Promise How South Africa is Being Stolen 35 was produced by a number of academics under the banner of the State Capacity Research Group 36 This report on state capture in South Africa was made publicly available in mid 2017 aiming to contribute to an analytically clear and academically rigorous treatment of institutionalised corruption in South Africa and contributing to the public debate about State capture Prof Bhorat and a select group of DPRU researchers then started work on related projects such as State Capture and the Economics of Corruption and Removing Corruption in State Owned Enterprises in South Africa Towards An Action Plan The research aimed to situate the case of South Africa within the relevant literature and critically assess how to define what has taken place They focused on the central role that State owned enterprises SOEs have played given their prominence in the SA economy and their location at the interface between the State and the private sector The research team used the Worldwide Governance Indicators WGI and analysed governance taking a more detailed empirical approach informed by their access to data Bibliography editEdited books edit These are some of Bhorat s edited books Better Choices for South Africa FORTHCOMING Co edited with Mcebisi Jonas and Greg Mills Brenthurst Foundation South Africa Haroon Bhorat Buthelezi M Chipkin I Duma S Friedenstein H Mondi L Peter C Prins N Qobo M Swilling M 2018 Shadow State The Politics of State Capture Wits University Press p 176 ISBN 9781776142149 Haroon Bhorat Conceicao P Cornia G A Odusola A eds 2017 Income Inequality Trends in sub Saharan Africa Divergence determinants and consequences United Nations Development Programme p 436 ISBN 9789211264241 Haroon Bhorat Finn Tarp eds 2016 Africa s Lions Growth Traps and Opportunities for Six African Economies Brookings Institution Press p 270 ISBN 9780815729495 Haroon Bhorat Ravi Kanbur eds 2006 Poverty and Policy in Post Apartheid South Africa HSRC Press p 512 ISBN 9780796921222 Haroon Bhorat Murray Leibbrandt Muzi Maziya Servaas Van Der Berg Ingrid Woolard eds 2001 Fighting Poverty Labour Markets and Inequality in South Africa Juta and Company Ltd p 252 ISBN 9781919713625 Book chapters edit Bhorat has authored or co authored over 50 book chapters To read the full list please visit his CV 37 Journal articles edit Bhorat has written more than 30 refereed journal articles including Haroon Bhorat Morne Oosthuizen Benjamin Stanwix 2021 Social Assistance Amidst the Covid 19 Epidemic in South Africa A Policy Assessment South African Journal of Economics 89 1 63 81 doi 10 1111 saje 12277 ISSN 0038 2280 Haroon Bhorat Ravi Kanbur Benjamin Stanwix Amy Thornton 2020 Measuring Multidimensional Labour Law Violation With an Application to South Africa British Journal of Industrial Relations 59 3 928 961 doi 10 1111 bjir 12580 Haroon Bhorat Ravi Kanbur Benjamin Stanwix 2019 Compliance with labor laws in developing countries IZA World of Labor 2 1 doi 10 15185 izawol 80 v2 hdl 10419 206584 Haroon Bhorat Ravi Kanbur Benjamin Stanwix 2017 Minimum wages in sub Saharan Africa A primer The World Bank Research Observer 31 2 lkw007 doi 10 1093 wbro lkw007 hdl 10986 30139 Haroon Bhorat Ravi Kanbur Natasha Mayet 2013 The impact of sectoral minimum wage laws on employment wages and hours of work in South Africa IZA Journal of Labor amp Development 2 1 doi 10 1186 2193 9020 2 1 hdl 10 1186 2193 9020 2 1 Haroon Bhorat Murray Leibbrandt Ingrid Woolard 2000 Understanding contemporary household inequality in South Africa Journal for Studies in Economic and Econometrics 24 3 31 52 doi 10 1080 03796205 2000 12129275 hdl 11427 7246 S2CID 53599919 Haroon Bhorat James Hodge 1999 Decomposing Shifts in Labour Demand in South Africa South African Journal of Economics 67 3 155 168 doi 10 1111 j 1813 6982 1999 tb01146 x He was also a guest editor for IZA Journal of Labor amp Development with Ravi Kanbur and Li Shi for the Special Collection titled Thematic series on Reforming Minimum Wage and Labor Regulation Policies in Developing Economies 38 in 2016 Other publications edit Bhorat has published more than 20 non refereed journal articles 36 collaborative working papers 63 DPRU working papers 10 DPRU policy briefs and more than 100 research reports He regularly publishes blogs book reviews analysis pieces and Op eds in the media and is frequently interviewed and cited by the press Many of his presentations in webinars conferences and other invited speaking engagements are available online References edit DPRU Retrieved 23 August 2021 Professor Haroon Bhorat Retrieved 19 January 2018 a b Haroon Bhorat PDF Archived PDF from the original on 20 January 2018 Retrieved 18 January 2018 Haroon Bhorat 11 February 2016 Retrieved 19 January 2018 NRF Rating Retrieved 21 October 2021 GoogleScholar Retrieved 21 October 2021 Twitter HaroonBhorat Retrieved 21 October 2021 DPRU Facebook Facebook Retrieved 21 October 2021 DPRU YouTube YouTube Retrieved 21 October 2021 President appoints Economic Advisory Council Retrieved 17 August 2021 South African Parliament s HLP on Acceleration of Change and Transformation PDF Retrieved 21 October 2021 Haroon Bhorat Research Fellow Retrieved 19 January 2018 IZA Contributors Retrieved 9 February 2021 Brookings Senior Fellows Retrieved 17 August 2021 UCT College of Fellows new members Retrieved 17 August 2021 UNU WIDER Board Retrieved 23 August 2021 IEA Exec Committee Retrieved 23 August 2021 Member of the Board of the Partnership for Economic Policy Retrieved 17 August 2021 Commission on Global Poverty Retrieved 21 October 2021 IEA 2017 World Congress Mexico Retrieved 21 October 2021 UN and WB Study on Development and Conflict Prevention Retrieved 21 October 2021 HLCommission on Health Employment amp Economic Growth PDF Retrieved 21 October 2021 UN Commission on Legal Empowerment of the Poor PDF Retrieved 21 October 2021 HLP on the Post 2015 Development Agenda PDF Retrieved 21 October 2021 South African Research Chairs Initiative SARChI Retrieved 21 October 2021 Infosys Prize Jury 2020 www infosys science foundation com Retrieved 9 December 2020 Minimum Wage Analysis Retrieved 5 November 2021 National Minimum Wage Commission Retrieved 5 November 2021 MEASURING LABOUR LAW VIOLATION An application to South Africa PDF Retrieved 21 October 2021 Bhorat Haroon Kanbur Ravi Stanwix Benjamin Thornton Amy 2021 Measuring Multi Dimensional Labour Law Violation with an Application to South Africa British Journal of Industrial Relations 59 3 928 961 doi 10 1111 bjir 12580 S2CID 219134767 Retrieved 21 October 2021 Alan Pifer Award Retrieved 5 November 2021 Haroon Bhorat Murray Leibbrandt 1999 Correlates of Vulnerability in the South African Labour Market PDF DPRU Working Paper 99 27 Haroon Bhorat Murray Leibbrandt Ingrid Woolard 1999 Understanding Contemporary Household Inequality in South Africa DPRU Working Paper 99 25 doi 10 2139 ssrn 943391 hdl 11427 7246 S2CID 53599919 Haroon Bhorat Ravi Kanbur Benjamin Stanwix 2017 Minimum Wages in Sub Saharan Africa A Primer The World Bank Research Observer 32 1 21 74 doi 10 1093 wbro lkw007 hdl 10986 30139 Betrayal of the Promise PDF Retrieved 9 November 2021 SCRP Retrieved 9 November 2021 DPRU Retrieved 21 October 2021 hematic series on Reforming Minimum Wage and Labor Regulation Policies in Developing Economies Retrieved 21 October 2021 External links editProfile on Google Scholar Haroon on IDEAS RePEc Haroon on The Conversation Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Haroon Bhorat amp oldid 1193598465, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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