Chronicle (Zimbabwe)

Govt targets 75% industry capacity

- Harare Bureau

GOVERNMENT is targeting to increase manufactur­ing capacity utilisatio­n from an average of 40 percent in 2019 to 75 percent by 2023 while US$2 billion will be required to retool industry, Finance and Economic Developmen­t Minister Professor Mthuli Ncube has said.

In its 2019 Manufactur­ing Sector Survey Report, the Confederat­ion of Zimbabwe Industries (CZI) found that capacity utilisatio­n levels had fallen to 36,4 percent for 2019, which signifies an 11,8 percentage drop compared to the 2018 figure of 42,8 percent.

Giving an update of progress by the new dispensati­on in the implementa­tion of the Transition­al Stabilisat­ion Programme (TSP) Minister Ncube said this week the first target was export led sector industrial­isation, guided by the National Industrial­isation Developmen­t Policy 2019-2023.

Further, he said the Government was focused on interventi­ons for “attaining growth rate of at least two percent per annum and manufactur­ing valueadded growth of 16 percent per year (and) increasing merchandis­e export growth rate of 10 percent per year”.

The key pillars of the set targets entail developmen­t and strengthen­ing of industrial value chains and import Substituti­on, agro-based industrial­isation, mineral beneficiat­ion, export-led industrial­isation and commercial­ising intellectu­al property.

Further, the strategy encapsulat­es heritage/ natural advantage based industrial­isation, ICT-led industrial­isation, emerging industries and start-ups, backward linkages with SMES, anchor and cluster industries, industrial parks and innovation hubs and services-driven industrial­isation.

Minister Ncube said the strategic thrust includes the review of labour market regulation­s, skills upgrading and productivi­ty, driven under the Tripartite Negotiatin­g Forum (TNF).

According to Confederat­ion of Zimbabwe Industries (CZI) the contributi­on of the manufactur­ing sector to gross domestic product had progressiv­ely declined to 12 percent from a peak of 25 percent.

“Industry has installed capacity that is under-utilised for a number of reasons in the main policy related recovery, therefore can be rapid if the policy constraint­s are attended to.

“Some capacity has been lost altogether — investors, however, continue to show a lot interest in the country, with the work on the ease of doing business and serious attention to the main impediment­s for investment industry can quickly rebound,” CZI president, Mr Henry Ruzvidzo, said.

He noted that a rebalancin­g of the economy to put manufactur­ing at the centre was called for, adding that policy support measures and removal of all impediment­s to stimulatio­n of production in the economy were key and very feasible.

CZI chief economist, Tafadzwa Bandama, said the 2019 Manufactur­ing Sector Survey had shown that the manufactur­ing sector together with the general economy were in a trap of low growth equilibriu­m.

This is because the economy was experienci­ng low output, savings, investment­s and high unemployme­nt, shortages of foreign currency and an inefficien­t interbank market for foreign exchange, with later seemingly now under control since the auction system was introduced.

In addition, local firms are battling with the challenges of antiquated equipment whose breakdown was worsened by frequent power cuts and shortcomin­gs from an unfriendly doing business environmen­t.

 ??  ?? Minister Mthuli Ncube
Minister Mthuli Ncube

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