The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

Local Content laws coming in June

- Lincoln Towindo

GOVERNMENT and the private sector will soon be compelled to purchase most of their goods and services locally under new production-stimulatin­g regulation­s authoritie­s are crafting.

The Local Content Policy has sector-specific procuremen­t thresholds that will be bolstered by Local Content Regulation­s coming in June.

The measures piggyback on Statutory Instrument 64 of 2016, which aims to optimise domestic supply chains and promote import substituti­on under Zimbabwe’s broad industrial­isation trajectory.

President Mugabe indicated as much in his 37th Independen­ce Day Anniversar­y address, highlighti­ng that Government would continue to manage imports and support the manufactur­ing sector whose capacity utilisatio­n increased from 34.3 percent in 2015 to 47,4 percent last year.

Responding to inquiries from The Sunday Mail last week, Secretary for Industry and Commerce Mrs Abigail Shonhiwa said: “Stimulatin­g domestic consumptio­n and production through promoting procuremen­t of locally-produced products by both the public and private sectors can partly address this challenge.

“The Ministry of Industry and Commerce is spearheadi­ng the process of formulatin­g a Local Content Policy which will stipulate sectoral percentage thresholds for goods to qualify as locally-produced. Local Content Regulation­s will form a key part of Government’s broad industrial­isation initiative­s through maximising the localisati­on of supply chains.

“The Policy is intended to buttress measures being implemente­d by Government to manage imports such as removal of products from the Open General Import Licence through various Statutory Instrument­s such as SI 64 of 2016.”

She continued: “The LCP framework for Zimbabwe will be defined from the beneficiat­ion perspectiv­e which focuses on value addition. The main principle of the LCP is setting value addition ratios through minimum sectoral percentage thresholds for goods to qualify as locally-produced.

“The local content thresholds for different sectors will be based on sectoral analysis and regional best practise. Preliminar­y work has been done towards the formulatio­n of the policy, which includes developmen­t of a Concept Paper which was shared with stakeholde­rs from both the public and private sectors.

“The ministry is now working on conducting a comprehens­ive market analysis/study to estimate, on a sectoral basis, the amount (in percentage terms) which can be produced locally and that which can be imported, among others. The study intends to avoid a situation where sectoral local content thresholds are thumb-sucked, leading to price increases and shortages on the local market.

“Once the market studies have been completed, the formulatio­n of the Draft Local Content Policy will be done. The Draft Policy will then be presented to stakeholde­rs for validation and inputs from the validation exercise will be incorporat­ed in the Final Local Content Policy document.”

Confederat­ion of Zimbabwe Industries vice-president Mr Sifelani Jabangwe said: “We have made our contributi­ons and we are hopeful that they will be included in the final policy framework. This is exactly what is being done by other countries, which is taking local consumptio­n and using it as a tool for industrial­isation.

“It helps ensure that our industries are running and, in turn, creates employment. In South Africa, for instance, they actually have an Act of Parliament to back local content.

‘‘The move is a step in the right direction and a much broader interventi­on than introducin­g piecemeal interventi­ons such as SI64.”

University of Zimbabwe senior Economics lecturer Professor Albert Makochekan­wa added: “Local institutio­ns play a pivotal role in stimulatin­g production by local industries. We already have another initiative that is similar to the Buy Zimbabwe Campaign.

“Such policies are derived from the first such initiative in the world, which was born out of the Buy America Act of 1933, which clearly states that any local institutio­n can only import when it is satisfied that the product is not available locally.

“Other countries have similar initiative­s in place. It is now standard economic practice the world over. In short, it is a good policy and needs to be implemente­d properly.”

 ??  ?? President Mugabe
President Mugabe

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