Daily Dispatch

Incentives bring jobs boost

Thousands find work following Trade and Industry’s huge R20bn cash injection

- By LINDA ENSOR

THE Department of Trade and Industry approved more than R20-billion in industrial finance in 2016-17, creating 27 000 new direct jobs and about 108 000 indirect jobs.

This emerged from a briefing on Tuesday by the economic and employment cluster of ministers chaired jointly by Rural Developmen­t and Land Reform Minister Gugile Nkwinti and Science and Technology Minister Naledi Pandor.

The Department of Trade and Industry’s incentive programme incorporat­es the automotive, clothing, critical infrastruc­ture, film and business-process outsourcin­g sectors, as well as special economic zones and the manufactur­ingcompeti­tiveness enhancemen­t programme.

The incentive expenditur­e of the department is sometimes criticised for being a waste of money, but Trade and Industry Minister Rob Davies told MPs the World Bank had noted in an update report on SA the country’s investment tax incentives “have contained job destructio­n in industrial sectors” and “have encouraged additional investment in agricultur­e, constructi­on, manufactur­ing, trade and other services”.

The job multiplier­s of investment in manufactur­ing were another strong argument in favour of the incentives, Davies said in a briefing to parliament’s trade and industry committee on the significan­ce of President Jacob Zuma’s state of the nation address for his department.

The World Bank report concluded that the additional investment generated by tax incentives exceeded the revenue foregone by the government in granting them.

It recommende­d that incentives be reoriented towards those industrial sectors that would create additional jobs at no additional cost to the fiscus.

Davies said that the 2017-18 budget allocated R5.5-billion for incentives with R16.9-billion for the three years of the medium-term expenditur­e framework.

Special economic zones are allocated R605-million in 2017-18 and manufactur­ing developmen­t incentives R3.6-billion.

The department plans to accelerate the black industrial­ist programme to achieve the three-year target of financing 100 industrial­ists by the end of 2017- 18. To date, 27 black industrial­ists have been supported at R577-million, which Davies said had resulted in R2.5-billion in private-sector investment.

InvestSA, which would be launched in March, would promote and facilitate investment­s. The cabinet had identified about 40 projects that could be created over the next few years.

On trade, Davies said the framework agreement for the tripartite free-trade area incorporat­ing 26 African countries had been finalised and would be presented to parliament for ratificati­on in the second half of 2017. Tariff negotiatio­ns with the East African Community and Egypt were far advanced.

The aim was to conclude them well before the end of 2017. The tripartite free-trade area is a building block for the envisaged continenta­l free-trade area for which a legal framework would hopefully be concluded in 2017. — BDLive

 ?? Picture: ROBERT TSHABALALA ?? HELPING HAND: The incentive programme incorporat­es automotive, clothing and infrastruc­ture sectors as well as special economic zones
Picture: ROBERT TSHABALALA HELPING HAND: The incentive programme incorporat­es automotive, clothing and infrastruc­ture sectors as well as special economic zones

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