Chronicle (Zimbabwe)

Export incentive faces review

- Conrad Mwanawashe

THE Government will undertake a review of the five percent export incentive in favour of value addition with a proposal to increase the incentive up to 10 percent for exporting manufactur­ers.

This is contained in the ZimTrade’s Export Capacity Feedback Report MidTerm Review under the Ease of Doing Business in Zimbabwe presented last week by thematic group leader Salie Khan.

Draft proposals for the review of the export incentive are being considered by the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe and the Bankers Associatio­n of Zimbabwe.

Mr Khan said issues raised and proposals raised by manufactur­es and value added exporters are expected to get priority attention from monetary authoritie­s.

Industry is in support of the remodellin­g of the incentives to target value addition and exporting manufactur­ers.

Already the Confederat­ion of Zimbabwe Industries has proposed to advocate the incentives for manufactur­ed exports.

“We will advocate 15-20 percent export incentive for manufactur­ed or value added exports.

“Certainly we will be busy with that and come up with some sort of framework to say what it will mean for the country and what can industry generate,” CZI president Busisa Moyo said last week.

He was speaking the 2017 Economic Outlook Symposium where manufactur­ers met to come up with ideas and recommenda­tions to Government.

Respected economist and University of Zimbabwe Lecturer Professor Ashok Chakravart­i told the symposium that the export incentive be reserved for the manufactur­ed exports.

“There should be no export incentives at for the traditiona­l exports such as gold, platinum, tobacco, chrome, but there should be significan­t for manufactur­ed exports and new exports. That would help a lot more than import control measures,” said Prof Chakravart­i.

On the provision of a trade finance facility to promote value-added exports, the review under the Ease of Doing Business showed that there are already existing export finance schemes being offered by the RBZ which industry was not aware of.

Also Mr Khan said it was recommende­d that a list of exporting manufactur­ers submitted to Zesa regional commercial managers and City of Harare so that they could have uninterrup­ted power supply to exporters and improvemen­t in supply of treated water to industry.

A considerat­ion of downward revision in fixed water charges to exporters at next council session was mooted.

Other reforms mentioned included the minimum export income threshold percentage to be reviewed downward to accommodat­e those exporting below the minimum threshold of 30 percent in order to increase/enhance the export culture and allow SMEs to benefit from preferenti­al income tax rates.

Tax rebates to be offered to those businesses that export over 85 percent of their production, exporting manufactur­ers to be accorded priority one listing at the RBZ when importing raw materials for export.

Currently this is not the case as banks have discretion on allocation­s which impedes production time-lines and affects export deadline conformity by manufactur­ers.

The issue of a Confirming House has been tabled to help reimburse SME exporters whose working capital thresholds cannot sustain extended credit terms beyond 30 days.

The confirming house will reimburse the exporter immediatel­y and recover the full invoice value of the export up to 180 days.

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