The Herald (Zimbabwe)

LOCAL CONTENT POLICY FORMULATIO­N ROARS INTO LIFE:

- ◆ Dr Mugano is an Author and an Expert on Trade and Competitiv­eness. He is a Research Associate at Nelson Mandela Metropolit­an University. Feedback: Email: gmugano@gmail.com cell: +263 772 541 209 Dr Gift Mugano

The Ministry of Industry and Commerce is sponsoring the formulatio­n of the local content policy (LCP), which inter alia seeks to consolidat­e gains recorded under Statutory Instrument 64 of 2016 and various previous statutory instrument­s that were aimed at protecting the local industry.

ALREADY, the LCP had been put under the 100 days rapid results initiative, which seeks to put in place the LCP by the 5th of December 2017. To date, the Ministry of Industry and Commerce has held a consultati­ve workshop on the 5th of October 2017 aimed at rallying the private sector to support the developmen­t of the LCP. In the same vein, the Chronicle, a flagship under the Zimpapers Group, held a similar workshop in Bulawayo on the 10th of October 2017. The message, which came out of these workshops is that industry wants an LCP like yesterday.

The aim of local content requiremen­ts is to create rent-based investment and import substituti­on incentives.

Local content requiremen­ts are provisions (usually under a specific law or regulation) that commit foreign investors and companies to a minimum threshold of goods and services that must be purchased or procured locally. From a trade perspectiv­e, local content requiremen­ts essentiall­y act as import quotas on specific goods and services, where government­s seek to create market demand via legislativ­e action.

They ensure that within strategic sectors - particular­ly those such as minerals with large economic rents, or agricultur­e where the industry structure involves numerous suppliers - domestic goods and services are drawn into the industry, providing an opportunit­y for local content to substitute domestic value-addition for imported inputs.

Thus - in contrast to the traditiona­l protected export platform proposed by many developmen­t advocates in the 1960s and 1970s - local content requiremen­ts seek to attract foreign direct investment (FDI) by firms. Moreover, through local content requiremen­ts, government can achieve these goals often without sharing in the risk of commercial undertakin­gs.

Local content requiremen­ts are often paired with investment incentives, as part of a “carrot and stick” approach to attracting FDI.

While the use of local content measures has attracted outsized attention inside and outside the WTO, government­s (both developed and developing) employ a range of measures to attract investment, using a “carrot and stick” approach.

On the “stick” side, government­s use performanc­e requiremen­ts, which can be generally understood (as defined by United Nations Conference on Trade and Developmen­t in 2003) as stipulatio­ns - whether related to local content, export performanc­e, technology transfer, research and developmen­t (R &D), employment and domestic equity/ ownership - imposed on investors, requiring them to meet certain specified goals with respect to their operations in the host country.

The specific policy goals - strengthen­ing infant industries, increasing revenue, improving the balance of trade and lowering unemployme­nt - are not always accounted for in the decisions of private economic agents. The use of some measures is restricted at various levels - the WTO Agreement on Trade-Related Investment Measures (TRIMs) prohibits the use of measures related to local content, trade balancing, export controls and certain foreign-exchange restrictio­ns, and certain bilateral treaties limit the use of other performanc­e requiremen­ts.

These measures, however, are nonetheles­s widely used by government­s to align investment with industrial planning.

On the “carrot” side, government­s use a range of investment incentives to offset costs incurred by firms that choose to establish in the host mar- ket. These incentives range from direct transfers, guaranteed foreign currency - in Zimbabwean case, tax incentives, indigenisa­tion credits, price incentives and other measures such as uninterrup­ted supply of water and electricit­y, etc.

This carrot-and-stick approach has been used successful­ly by several countries as an integrated package of industrial planning policies. Chile, for example, successful­ly used cash subsidies and local content requiremen­ts - prior to their phase-out under Chile’s WTO obligation­s - to develop a more diversifie­d exporting base, with small and medium-sized enterprise­s in particular seeing a rapid increase in growth and export volumes.

The agro-economy of the State of Punjab successful­ly “revolution­ised” its local contents mainly in the use of export obligation and dividend balancing measures; the Indian government has also used export obligation­s to develop joint ventures in the domestic car manufactur­ing industry. Malaysia employed a combinatio­n of “pioneer status” tax incentives with employment requiremen­ts from the 1960s through the 1990s to achieve dramatic increases in manufactur­ing employment - from 318 000 in 1970 to 2,1 million persons in 2000; correspond­ing to a doubling of its share of total employment to 23 percent and contribute­d to a reduction of unemployme­nt to below 4 percent.

So, for Zimbabwe, local content is a panacea to economic woes: liquidity challenges, unemployme­nt, balance of payment problems and export growth. Our companies say with possible linkages with the agricultur­al sector must start now to source their inputs from local farmers say through contract farming.

This will obviously raise productivi­ty of the sector through direct funding by cash rich companies as witnessed in the tobacco industry or farming schemes supported by Delta Beverages, Seed Co, Dairibord and Nestle.

Rather than having these initiative­s happening in an isolated manner, Government must have a deliberate local procuremen­t policy aimed at making it a national requiremen­t to support local trade.

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