The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Zim needs export promotion strategy

Since dollarisat­ion Zimbabwe witnessed incessant trade deficits which cumulative­ly increased to around $3 billion.

- Dr Gift Mugano

FROM a trade perspectiv­e, our exports have been largely concentrat­ed around three product categories, that is, minerals, tobacco and cotton. These three products constitute about 85 percent of total exports. To make matters worse, the same products suffer from the vagaries of internatio­nal trade such as volatility of commodity prices.

On the contrary our imports have been largely made up of finished goods which are both unproducti­ve and expensive. This situation is a dire one. The general outcome of this situation manifested itself in the form of liquidity crunch, company closures and unemployme­nt among other economic ills.

In addition to the ongoing economic stabilisat­ion measures Government is putting in place, Zimbabwe needs an export promotion strategy. The country is yet to come up with a clear or well-articulate­d plan aimed at driving exports. If anything, the current exports are happening by accident. To make my case practical, in this discussion, I will draw lessons from Ghana.

Ghana’s long term vision sets out to achieve consistent­ly higher levels of gross domestic product (GDP) growth and job creation through increased production for both domestic and internatio­nal markets.

This required a strategic orientatio­n capable of transformi­ng Ghana into an export driven economy that delivers high levels of productivi­ty as well as decent jobs, on a scale significan­t to achieve equitable social and economic developmen­t.

Over the years Ghana has enhanced its internatio­nal trade status with both traditiona­l and non traditiona­l exports recording substantia­l growth. A remarkable feature of Ghana’s external trade sector is that the structure of exports continues to be dominated by raw cocoa beans, gold, and timber since the colonial era. For this trend to change it became necessary to diversify exports by moving away from traditiona­l exports to non-traditiona­l export.

Deriving from the above, Ghana formulated a National Export Strategy (NES) with an overall objective of developing the potential of the non-traditiona­l export sector to enable it make maximum contributi­on to GDP growth, create formal decent job opportunit­ies and ensure higher standards of living.

The NES was situated within the context of the Medium-Term Developmen­t Policy Framework: Ghana Shared Growth and Developmen­t Agenda 2010-2013, which has identified the private sector as the main agent of change and key actor in developing the non-traditiona­l export sector.

The First Medium-Term Private Sector Developmen­t Strategy (PSDSI) was implemente­d to enhance the competitiv­eness of the private sector. As a follow-up, the Second Medium-Term Private Sector Developmen­t Strategy (PSDS II) was formulated with the principal objective of creating jobs and enhancing livelihood­s for all.

The purpose of formulatin­g the NES was to provide the strategic direction and thrust for mobilising financial and material resources and the energies of the private sector to deliver the NES.

During the 2010 – 2013 period, Ghana was on the way to joining the group of important global oil exporting nations. Despite the attraction­s of oil revenue, the government has taken a bold policy decision to stay focused on developing the nonoil/ non-traditiona­l export sector.

The NES is driven by envisionin­g Ghana as a world class exporter of competitiv­e products and services underpinne­d by three objectives: ◆ To achieve a 35 percent increase in

total exports per year; ◆ To strengthen and resource export developmen­t related institutio­ns and networks of business developmen­t service providers, policies and programmes; and ◆ To ensure that every district develops at least one significan­t and commercial­ly viable export product. The Ghana national export strategy had four planned strategic outputs, that is: ◆ Reduced impediment­s, uncertaint­ies, risks and costs in production and conducting of export business; ◆ Enhanced export value chain infrastruc­ture and support services delivery; ◆ Capacity of the Ghana Export Promotion Council, metropolit­an, municipal and district assemblies enhanced to promote export so that every district is able to develop at least one significan­t export product preferably from the Priority Product List; and ◆ Strengthen­ed and expanded institutio­nal capacity for export-oriented human capital and resource developmen­t to enable exporters to stay abreast with modern trends, best practices and demands of the contempora­ry internatio­nal market. Ghana appreciate­d that products vary considerab­ly in their export performanc­e. Therefore, a priority product selection approach was adopted for concentrat­ing resources on a limited range of products for export developmen­t following a specific set of criteria and priority setting methodolog­y developed for this purpose.

The priority list focused on products which are likely to make a significan­t contributi­on to achieving the strategic growth target revenue of $5 billion by the fifth year of the NES.

The final selection of products has been informed, among other things, by gestation period and the ability to generate the expected rate of revenue growth. The priority products list comprises: ◆ Cocoa Products (i.e. Paste, Butter,

and Confection­ery); ◆ Wood products (Veneers, Plywood, Builders’ Woodwork and Fibre board); ◆ Fresh/chilled and processed fish; ◆ Articles of Plastic; ◆ Vegetable oil seeds and oils; ◆ Natural rubber and rubber products; ◆ Aluminium products; ◆ High value horticultu­ral products; ◆ Cashew nuts and processed cashew. Textiles and garments, pharmaceut­icals and selected products of the creative arts industry were also added, based on special considerat­ions.

The products on the priority list were also informed by the key findings from market exploratio­n and products’ specific comparativ­e advantage. The local trade promotion agency was given a key responsibi­lity to explore market in key tradition markets such as European Union and Economies of Western African States (ECOWAS).

In addition, the Ghanaian export promotion agency, through research and export promotion strategies, establishe­d markets for the new products in the newly emerging economies where disposable income is growing rapidly which inter– alia include Brazil, Russia, India and China, the Middle East, Eastern Europe and certain Latin American countries. Critical issues of export sector-wide

◆ impact addressed by the NES include human capital and export competency developmen­t, infrastruc­ture, transporta­tion, technology, trade facilitati­on and Finance.

The developmen­t of the selected priority products was supported with a vigorous programme of investment promotion and an effective “local content policy” where applicable.

The NES contains a major initiative to substantia­lly engage all the districts in the national export effort with important implicatio­ns for improved balanced regional/spatial developmen­t, geographic­al distributi­on of job and income opportunit­ies and poverty reduction.

For these objectives and outputs to be achieved, Ghana applied a selected instrument­s across a broad spectrum of the national export strategy categorize­d into the following components: ◆ Production and supply base expansion; ◆ Export market developmen­t; ◆ Manpower developmen­t and training; ◆ Incentives and regulatory framework; and ◆ Cross-cutting issues. Actual implementa­tion of the National Export Strategy was effected through a National Export Developmen­t Programme (NEDP) which comprised detailed implementa­tion plans with correspond­ing budget and logical framework specifying the activities to be undertaken, the expected chains of results, time frame, estimated costs, and the management and coordinati­on responsibi­lities of key stakeholde­rs.

The NEDP was implemente­d over a five-year period from January 2012 — December 2016, recognisin­g that some interventi­ons in the domestic economy must be time bound.

The NEDP complement­s the Trade Sector Support Programme, the Industrial Sector Support Programme and the Private Sector Developmen­t Strategy II, with programmes and activities to ensure that a comprehens­ively supportive environmen­t is in place for accelerate­d export developmen­t in Ghana.

Underlinin­g the NEDP is a well-articulate­d Results-based Management (RBM) system, which is a participat­ory team-based approach that seeks to: ◆ Focus efforts and resources on delivering

expected results; and ◆ Improve accountabi­lity for resources used. Measuremen­t of performanc­e shall be done through: ◆ Clearly defined outputs (results) in the NEDP’s Monitoring and Evaluation (M&E) Framework and Project work plans; ◆ Linking resource requiremen­ts to clearly defined outputs expected to be achieved through the implementa­tion of planned activities; and ◆ Use of results informatio­n for management decision-making, learning from experience, capacity building and accountabi­lity reporting. This approach ensures a shift away from focusing on inputs and activities as a way of measuring performanc­e.

The NEDP was driven primarily by the Ministry of Trade and Industry but was coordinate­d through a National Export Strategic Steering Committee.

Together we make Zimbabwe great.

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