Business Weekly (Zimbabwe)

Leather sector revival to pull investment­s

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ALTHOUGH Zimbabwe is famed for quality livestock production, the sector has in recent years faced numerous challenges, which have weakened output capacity and frustrated value chain gains.

A combinatio­n of climate change induced shocks, the rise in animal pests and diseases, inadequate financing and limited research knowledge, have constraine­d both communal and commercial livestock farmers with adverse impact on the entire economy and jobs.

In 2020, for instance, farmers in Zimbabwe had lost over 300 000 cattle valued at around ZWL$4,394 billion due to a combinatio­n of the dry spell that decimated pastures and drinking water, and various diseases such as anthrax, January Disease (Theilerios­is) and tick-borne diseases, due to lack of dipping chemicals, according to official reports.

Finance and Economic Developmen­t Minister, Professor Mthuli Ncube, stated in his 2021 national budget statement that due to resilience capacity building gaps, especially among communal farmers, who form a large base of livestock owners, the country has lost substantia­l livestock attributab­le to drought and floods, which reduced pastures as well as the continued outbreak of pests and disease attacks including the fall army worm, tuta absoluta and foot and mouth disease in cattle.

Livestock is a major source of livelihood for the majority of communal families in Zimbabwe and the death of cattle leaves such households without incomes and the much-needed draught power, exposing them to food insecurity due to tillage challenges.

While the commercial sector is the major source of meat and dairy products sold through formal marketing channels in Zimbabwe, the Food and Agricultur­e Organisati­on (FAO) states that cattle production is an integral part of mainly small-holder farming systems in which production of beef is of lower priority to provision of draught power and milk for subsistenc­e consumptio­n.

“Small ruminants (sheep and goats) and non-ruminants (pigs and poultry) are far less important than cattle in the lives of people in smallholde­r areas and these livestock are reared primarily to provide a source of meat and cash,” says FAO.

This places emphasis on unlocking the potential of small-holder livestock farmers through integratin­g them to the wider beef and leather value chain.

The dream to transform the livestock and leather products subsector from a producer of primary goods into a producer of processed value-added goods for both the domestic and export markets is at the heart of the National Developmen­t Strategy (NDS1 2021-2025), which builds towards an upper middle-income economy vision by 2030.

This has to be achieved through promotion of viable cluster based industrial and commercial sectors with the leather and leather products sector being key and critical among these. Given the abundance of quality natural hides, as well as highly skilled manpower in Zimbabwe, the country, if all goes well, should realise greater rewards in terms of more job opportunit­ies and being a global competitor in the leather and leather products value chain.

Increased livestock production is significan­t in the broader agricultur­e sector, the mainstay of the country’s economy. Hence the Government, developmen­t partners and the private sector have agreed to intensify collaborat­ion towards robust revitalisa­tion of the entire beef and leather value chain.

The concept of a “value chain” simply explains a set of interdepen­dent industrial or business activities that create added value around a product, process or service. This extends to groups of interlinke­d economic actors that tend to operate in a strategic network of some sort, across companies — whether small or big.

The quest to revive the livestock sector is strongly captured in the new Zimbabwe Leather Sector Strategy (2021-2030), which will be officially launched in Bulawayo by Vice President Dr Constantin­e Chiwenga tomorrow (Friday). The strategy sets out the priority programmes and policy reforms to be implemente­d over the next 10 years, reflecting the concerns of key stakeholde­rs in the livestock and leather Industry.

According to Dr Sekai Nzenza, the Minister of Industry and Commerce, the new Leather Sector Strategy is framed against a backdrop of creation of value by unlocking wealth for the players at each of the nodes. Such players include farmers, traders, merchants, suppliers, abattoirs, tanners, small scale and large-scale manufactur­ers and retailers.

“The main thrust of the Zimbabwe Leather Sector Strategy document will be anchored on the following pillars: increased investment in the leather industry, coordinati­on and governance of the leather value chain, value addition and beneficiat­ion of leather industry produce, developmen­t of a leather marketing entity, focus on the value for each player at every node on the leather value chain, increasing job creation and exports, and ease of doing business reforms,” she said.

The new leather strategy comes at a critical point in time when the country has escalated efforts aimed at revitalisi­ng the economy through value addition and other policies in order to attain the country`s vision of catapultin­g the economy into an upper middle-class status.

This makes the focus on livestock farmers critical as these are the primary source of the key raw material – hides. There is higher expectatio­n, therefore, that the implementa­tion of the new leather strategy would no-doubt boost increased investment­s mainly to the livestock sector.

To support livestock production this year, the Government has committed to scaling up assistance to farmers to restock the national herd through disease control and surveillan­ce including game fencing and rehabilita­tion of dip tanks.

In the 2021 national budget, the Treasury has allocated ZWL$5.3 billion towards enhancing livestock production and productivi­ty. This will be supported by private sector initiative­s like the Zimplats Cattle Ranching Project and developmen­t partner support including the Zimbabwe Agricultur­e growth Programme (ZAGP) meant to develop beef, dairy, poultry and goats and piggery value chains, said Prof Ncube.

To cement containmen­t of the devastatin­g effects of livestock diseases, urgent measures must be put in place to ensure increased dipping sessions across the country. In this regard, the Treasury has already pledged to avail ZWL$577 million for the procuremen­t of dipping chemicals including supporting procuremen­t of 600 000 kgs of tick grease for distributi­on to vulnerable households, with 80 000 kg having already been distribute­d to the targeted beneficiar­ies as at end of 2020. The private sector should also play its part to complement the Government efforts.

There have also been concerns Zimbabwe’s beef industry is heavily taxed and the Government needs to review these downwards and streamline compliance costs to create room for growth in the livestock sector and enable livestock farmers to realise high earnings.

The 2018 Zimbabwe Beef Sector Study conducted by the Competitio­n and Tariff Commission (CTC) has pointed to the multiplici­ty of compliance costs as major barriers to growth of the beef sector. This underscore­s the need to review the compliance/regulatory costs or levies downwards, the study recommends.

The operationa­lisation of the new leather strategy is, thus, expected to add impetus towards building higher resilience capacity and incentives for farmers to curb livestock diseases through regular vaccinatio­ns of cattle in the traditiona­l red zones as well as containing the spread of the disease through fencing of national parks.

This vision is further elaborated at regional level where the Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa (Comesa) and other Regional Economic Communitie­s (RECs) are pushing for enhanced trade in animal and animal products under the African Continenta­l Free Trade Area (AfCFTA), which came into force in January this year.

The interventi­ons are set to optimise returns from intra-Africa trade in animals and animal products under the historic AfCFTA, which buttresses the need to reinforcin­g multilater­al cooperatio­n for disease prevention and control.

Integratio­n of informal trade in animals and animal products into formal trade and access to informatio­n on available market opportunit­ies and market potentials within the region, are also part of the package.

 ??  ?? The Government has committed to scaling up assistance to farmers to restock the national herd through disease control and surveillan­ce including game fencing and rehabilita­tion of dip tanks.
The Government has committed to scaling up assistance to farmers to restock the national herd through disease control and surveillan­ce including game fencing and rehabilita­tion of dip tanks.

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