The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

Putting industry on top agenda

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HClemence Machadu OWDY folks!

Zimbabwe is expected to launch a new industrial policy ( IP) this year, following the expiry of the one launched in 2012 to run up to 2016.

The new policy is going to run until 2020.

The World Bank defines an industrial policy as “government efforts to alter industrial structure to promote productivi­ty based growth”.

An IP is very important in that it defines a country’s road to industrial­isation and guides the direction towards industrial progress.

For a country with countless natural resources available for value addition, there is certainly need for a deliberate plan defining how they can be best utilised to give an optimal return and improve the quality of lives of the generality of its citizenry.

The vision of the preceding IP was to transform Zimbabwe from a producer of primary goods into a producer of processed value-added goods for both the domestic and export markets.

That vision is still a far cry considerin­g how Zimbabwe’s exports are still dominated by raw materials, with a significan­t amount of finished goods used in the country still being imported from other nations.

The preceding IDP also failed to meet its overall objective of restoring the manufactur­ing sector’s contributi­on to GDP to 30 percent and its contributi­on to exports to 50 percent and increase capacity utilisatio­n to 80 percent.

Industrial capacity utilisatio­n is currently at 47 percent, while manufactur­ing contributi­on to both exports and GDP are nowhere near the intended targets.

While the IP assumed an average GDP growth of at least 7 percent per annum during its lifespan, the actual average outturn was 4,12 percent per annum.

The failure of the IP to meet its targets is mainly attributed to lack of funding.

However, non-implementa­tion of identified strategies is also worth mentioning.

The success of any policy is hinged on full implementa­tion of its strategies.

The previous IP was full of brilliant ideas that unfortunat­ely remained on paper.

For instance, it talked about establishi­ng an industrial bank primarily dedicated to financing medium and long term recapitali­sation of the industry.

Other key sectors in the economy such as agricultur­e, infrastruc­ture and SMEs already have dedicated financial institutio­ns.

But the manufactur­ing sector is still competing with such sectors for the little available loans given by banks.

For instance, the agricultur­al sector which is supported by Agribank, got 16 percent of bank loans last year while the manufactur­ing sector only got 10 percent.

A dedicated industrial bank would have made a difference.

The policy also did not do well in implementi­ng other measures such as strengthen­ing existing institutio­ns such as SIRDC to coordinate the modernisat­ion of industry and to foster a well-coordinate­d brand management of the Government, the State and the country.

As the country prepares for the launch of yet another IP to set out the strategies to foster rapid industrial­isation in the next five years, there are a number of issues that need to be addressed in order for the policy to succeed.

First and foremost, Government should be careful in the manner it relies on protection­ism as an industrial­isation strategy.

It can be argued that Government heavily relied on protection over the last half decade, to the end that other countries exporting to Zimbabwe complained at some point.

Protection is not a permanent solution, especially noting how Zimbabwe’s commitment­s to deeper regional integratio­n require it to actually lower down (or remove) its tariffs and eliminate other non-tariff barriers to trade.

In any case, protection should only be granted to firms that really promise to be competitiv­e and dynamic.

If a company that was producing a pack of toothpicks for $1 still produces the same product for $1 after ten years of protection, can that same company be protected for another decade?

The new IP should have a mechanism for weighing the strategies of companies seeking to be incubated.

Only those that have concrete turnaround strategies should be supported with protection.

Those strategies should be regularly monitored to see if they are being implemente­d.

Most companies that are protected tend to relax as they would have been guaranteed a market even if they produce substandar­d products.

The new IP should also have bold strategies promoting exports diversific­ation.

Exports are currently crucial to the economy, as they bring 60 percent of the country’s revenue.

Zimbabwe’s exports are currently concentrat­ed to a few countries whose currencies are depreciati­ng, resulting in lower export returns.

The country’s main export markets such as South Africa, Mozambique and Malawi saw their currencies depreciati­ng, which discourage­d some manufactur­ers from exporting.

The new IP should therefore endeavour to minimise the export risk by promoting diversific­ation of export markets as well as creating new products for new markets.

More export incentives such as the five percent bond facility can also abet manufactur­ers to recover their production costs.

The need to increase export markets is also against the background of the country’s low aggregate demand, which means that as production capacity increases, the local market may not be able to take up all the goods produced by local companies.

Zimbabwe’s final consumptio­n succumbed to low disposable incomes with private non-capital spending declining by four percent last year. Overall consumptio­n was also projected to decline by two percent in 2016 against a drop of one percent in 2015.

There is therefore need to increase knowledge of the export process and to ensure that local manufactur­ers perfectly understand the tastes and preference­s of consumers in those markets.

The political landscape is also a very key determinan­t of the success of any IP, as was the case in East Asia.

A good example is the GNU period when the political parties in Government were accused of sabotaging each other.

A case in point were the clashes between the Ministries of Mines ( ZANU-PF) and that of Industry and Commerce ( MDC). Some attribute the clashes to the ultimate failure of the ZISCO deal.

The steel sector was identified as one of the four priority sectors in the IP of that time and Zisco was the main driver as 80 percent of the companies in the sector relied on raw materials from the steel giant.

As the country waits for a new IP, Government must also deal with divisive politics that have the potential to curtail the success of policies. We may no longer have contesting multi-parties in Government, but they can have the same effect as multi-factions in Government.

The growth of the manufactur­ing sector over the past few years has not been encouragin­g.

The two industrial policies implemente­d over the past decade also did not impress much.

To break that pattern, Government should be realistic in the crafting of the new IP and should flex more political will to propel full implementa­tion of IP strategies.

Otherwise its efforts to alter industrial structure to promote productivi­ty based growth will be in vain.

Later folks!

The steel sector was identified as one of the four priority sectors in the IP of that time and Zisco was the main driver as 80 percent of the companies in the sector relied on raw materials from the steel giant.

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