Daily Nation Newspaper

Design mineral value-addition policies, Govt urged

- By BUUMBA CHIMBULU

POLICIES that enhance mineral value addition strategies that can create linkages with other parts of the economy should be designed and implemente­d.

Doing this will ensure cascaded benefits to the state in form of increased revenue generation, employment creation, and technology transfer, says Centre for Trade Policy and Developmen­t (CTPD) Senior Researcher – Extractive­s, Webby Banda.

Mr Banda observed that Zambia did not process its minerals into higher-value output resulting in lost gains from value addition processes.

He indicated that exporting raw mineral resources meant denying the country the benefits that came with activities along a fully vertically integrated mineral value chain.

The benefits, Mr Banda said in a statement, included job creation, tax revenue generation, and spill over economic effects to other industries among others.

“Mineral resources in

Zambia offer a wide range of opportunit­ies to: build industries to supply inputs to the mining sector, produce key mineral-based feedstock’s for other sectors; and manufactur­e intermedia­te and finished products for domestic consumptio­n that will promote local and regional economic developmen­t,” he said.

Mr Banda indicated that the African Mining Vision recognised that mining was a key sector for a growing, diversifie­d, competitiv­e, and industry-based economy in Africa.

He explained that for Africa to harness these benefits, the enclave nature of mining will have to be extinguish­ed.

“Achieving this goal means that mineral-rich countries like Zambia will need to go beyond optimising revenues collected from the mining industry, but act strategica­lly to increase the value of the resources extracted.

“This can best be achieved by creating and strengthen­ing the linkages between the mining sector and the rest of the economy,” Mr Banda said.

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