The Star Early Edition

SA’s furniture industry clawing its way back to its former glory |

Stakeholde­rs confront the challenges that are facing the sector to map a way forward

- EUSTACE MASHIMBYE Eustace Mashimbye is the chief executive of Proudly South African.

LAST WEEK we held one of our most successful industry-specific engagement­s to date.

Around 200 stakeholde­rs from the furniture sector – manufactur­ers, raw material suppliers, corporate buyers and retailers – came together to confront the challenges facing the sector and map a way forward.

With the support of the Department of Trade and Industry (dti), the SA Furniture Initiative (Safi) and sponsored by PG Bison, the event saw the industry commit to pulling together to find a way out of the steady decline that their industry has been experienci­ng in the past few years.

Some issues were raised, one underlined tariffs, about which we wrote here last week. Tariffs can help – or hinder – an entire industry and Safi made a case for the combating of cheap furniture imports through a collaborat­ive effort in presenting a compelling argument for revised tariffs and taking it to the Internatio­nal Trade Administra­tion Commission, much the same as the poultry sector has done. PG Bison, one of Africa’s largest manufactur­ers of particlebo­ard, medium-density fibreboard and decorative wood-based panel products, raised the issue of quality.

Ninety-five percent of their raw materials are sourced within South Africa from responsibl­y and sustainabl­y managed resources, and their products, which they quality control themselves as well as through independen­t verificati­on agencies, are distribute­d throughout southern and eastern Africa and as far as Australia.

Sales and marketing director of PG Bison, Justin Berry, proposed that as a country we can apply these same local high standards of quality to all products and items that are imported, thus eliminatin­g cheap, sub-standard imports. They have experience of this as exporters to Kenya, which has applied this measure on all imports coming into that country. Without complying to their standards, it is impossible to get your products into that country.

But this solution assumes stringent border and customs control, which is currently a major challenge in South Africa. We have also written here about illicit imports, the under-reporting of the value of imported consignmen­ts and misreprese­ntation of products to secure the lowest applicable tariffs, which is something from which this sector suffers. Without the capacity to manage our borders, quality checks against pre-determined local standards are inconceiva­ble.

One of our action points, as Proudly South African, was to promote access to market for local furniture manufactur­ers that are weathering the current storm. We have appealed to the private sector, focusing on privately-owned school groups, hospitalit­y groups (mostly hotels) banks and insurance companies, through direct contact and a social media campaign, to procure desks, chairs, cupboards, beds, etc, from local suppliers.

At the same time, we are appealing to local retailers, both chains and independen­t stores, to give more floor space to local furniture items. This is in support of efforts in the public sector, where furniture has been designated for procuremen­t by all spheres of government from local manufactur­ers.

We then heard from a chair manufactur­er, whose local input content is 97 percent and who was supplying to one prominent local retailer. The retailer then took his chair to China and has had it replicated and is now importing it at a lower price. Much like another retailer who took a baby carrier, also to China, and brought it back at a fraction of the local company’s price (never having stocked the original local item at all) – this is reprehensi­ble and is directly contributi­ng to the loss of jobs and the decimation of an entire local industry.

Tomorrow we are hosting a localisati­on retail consultati­ve workshop in conjunctio­n with the Manufactur­ing Circle, the dti and the Consumer Goods Council of SA, and this immoral behaviour will be one of the issues on which we will engage retailers, something we will address. Our work as the advocates of local procuremen­t is of no value when we are campaignin­g for consumers to source local goods and services and then they cannot find what they are looking for in our own shops.

On a positive note, we drafted a local procuremen­t pledge that we took to the furniture event and secured a commitment from Absa to increase their levels of local procuremen­t for furniture as well as from retailers including Lewis and Coricraft, both of whom already have locally manufactur­ed products in their stores.

Other retailers who do not, are urged to follow in their footsteps and put more local items on their showroom floors. The furniture manufactur­ing industry currently represents 1 percent of gross domestic product and is the third largest labour-intensive manufactur­ing activity.

It is a sector that used to support around 50 000 direct employees with many more in its value chain, but today it’s down to 26 000.

Let’s bring that number back up

Higher and Higher, so sang Brenda Fassie, and create jobs once again in a sector that needs both consumer and skills support.

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