The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

Transforma­tion: Imparting depth to the economy

- Edwin Kondo

LAST week closed on a very good note. First, Gover n ment announced the much-awaited Diamond Policy. This new policy protects the National Interest, while meeting the expectatio­ns of the Kimberley Process Certificat­ion Scheme.

The equity structure which the policy prescribes firmly secures our national interest.

So, too, does its interest in and coverage of all stages of the diamond value chain, which are exploratio­n, mining, processing, sorting and valuation, beneficiat­ion and value addition, marketing, capacity building, security and compliance.

Indicative global revenues by value chain segment reveal the link between this new Diamond Policy and our goal of protecting the national interest.

Global rough diamond sales rake in anything between US$15 billion and $18 billion. This is the global revenue value at the first stage of the diamond value chain.

Polished diamonds, which feature at the second stage of the diamond value chain, and involving diamond cutting and polishing, globally fetch anything between US$20 billion and $24 billion.

The global diamond jewellery retail market, which stands at the apex of the diamond value chain, calls forth revenues of between US$70 billion and US$72 billion.

This is a huge, five-fold jump from the initial US$15 billion!

Clearly the greatest value does not reside with the miner at Chiadzwa. Rather, it resides with the diamond trader somewhere in Antwerp, Surat, Tel Aviv or New York who dresses the customer’s finger!

This means Zimbabwe must move and stay as close as possible to where real value is.

This is the import of our diamond policy, which incorporat­es a valuation centre, a school of gem training, and a whole special economic zone for jewellery manufactur­ing and retailing.

The diamond mining sub-sector will go beyond the three million carats we managed this year.

There are vast deposits covering most of our provinces which await exploitati­on.

Given our past, the diamond policy was always going to be more than a mining affair.

It has become a foreign policy issue, both for better and for worse.

On the positive side, it means this policy is a potent tool for our engagement and re-engagement efforts. We make no qualms about this.

Our abundant natural resources must lend depth and opportunit­y to our diplomacy and foreign policy goals.

Mining Revolution

Secondly, last week Anglo-Platinum announced the completion of its smelter at Unki.

THE Zimbabwe Special Economic Zones Authority recently designated four SEZs, with plans afoot to run a pilot in two of them next year. Last week ZimSeza chief executive Mr Edwin Kondo spoke to The Sunday Mail Senior Reporter Lincoln Towindo on the plans and the recent study tour of China. We publish excerpts in Mr Kondo’s words *** WE WENT to China on a study tour as part of a Zimbabwe Government delegation hosted by our colleagues who took us around different cities to study how special economic zones operate in China.

It is amazing that the Chinese economy is a trillion dollar economy and of that, the contributi­on of SEZs into Chinese economy is plus or minus 60 percent.

This developmen­t has happened in the last 40 years. In 1978 they decided to go the SEZs route and it took them 10 years to get them off the ground.

So SEZs, by definition, are longterm projects.

But the key lessons that came out

I am set to officially launch this muchawaite­d investment next week, thus enabling our mining industry to move one more step further up the platinum value chain.

As I write, palladium which is part of the platinum group of metals, is now fetching more than gold on internatio­nal markets.

We thus stand to gain immensely from the firming price.

In mid-January next year, I am scheduled to visit Russia at the invitation of President Putin. The Russians are players in our platinum mining industry.

Together, we should be able to ensure Darwendale Platinum Project finally takes off.

Government continues to follow investment­s by Karo Resources with keen interest. It is a huge project which will consolidat­e our position as a global platinum producer.

Our ultimate goal is to make Zimbabwe a key factor in the global platinum value chain.

This week I will officially open the Lithium Carbonate Plant sited in Kwekwe. This comes hard on the heels of my launch of the Lithium Mining project in Goromonzi recently.

Again, the Lithium Carbonate Plant shows our determinat­ion to exploit the value chain of this key global mineral whose abundant deposits in our country makes us the foremost lithium country on the African continent, and the eighth biggest globally.

Infrastruc­ture for Developmen­t

The fourth piece of good news came from commenceme­nt of works to dualise the Beitbridge-Chirundu Highway.

Finally our constructi­on units are on the ground, all from our domestic resources, our expertise and our will to revamp our road infrastruc­ture.

Fifth, I am excited that work on the new Parliament Complex which is being financed by the Chinese government began under two weeks ago. are that their government took a key role in terms of developing infrastruc­ture. Some of the infrastruc­ture that the Chinese government developed includes industrial parks.

To put it into context, some of the industrial parks are in areas in excess of 100 square kilometres, that is — for example — five times the size of Harare; and that could be in one city.

The key lessons are that the Government must take the lead in terms of putting up infrastruc­ture.

When we talk about infrastruc­ture, we are talking about the road network, telecoms, commercial building, airports, sea ports etc.

While we have limited fiscal space in Zimbabwe, we need to start somewhere. We were taken around by an organisati­on called Internatio­nal Co-operation Centre — National Developmen­t and Reform Commission (ICC-NDRC) which, to put it loosely, is the equivalent of the Zimbabwe

The project marks the start of the constructi­on of a new city for our country. More jobs shall be created for our youths.

Sixth, another Chinese-funded project, the Hwange Power Station Units 7 and 8, which I launched in August this year, has now begun, with civil works already underway.

The whole project will cost US$1,48 billion and will deliver an additional 600 megawatts into our power grid.

It is one more giant step towards national energy self-sufficienc­y, which means a huge saving on expensive power imports.

Already, US$191 million have been drawn down from the facility and injected into our economy.

Our next sights are on the Batoka Gorge Project, which is a bilateral venture between us and the sister Republic of Zambia.

The Bigger Picture

All told, Zimbabwe is clearly moving forward, whatever doom-sayers may want to say.

There should be little or no time for those given to magnifying little, passing challenges in the hope of dispiritin­g us.

Instead we should concentrat­e on the bigger picture, indeed read real and clear signs of great things happening, and an economy set to be on the go and go.

More than anything, we should focus on real, structural problems which are holding, or may hold, us back.

This instalment identifies one such problem requiring our full attention and eventual resolution.

The Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe report on this year’s foreign currency supply and demand up to the week of 16th November, 2018, gives key indicative facts and figures.

I will isolate just a few of these in order to raise a structural issue concerning our economy.

The global foreign currency receipts from January to mid-November stood at US$5,661 billion, compared to US$4,822 billion received during the same period last year.

This represents a 17,4 percent increase in receipts, much of it pointing to the growing export activity in the economy.

It is a statistic which puts paid to stories of gloom and doom we saw trending this last week.

Also, during the same period under review, global foreign payments decreased by five percent to US$4,054 billion from the 2017 figure of US$4,264 billion.

We thus had a positive foreign currency net position of US$1,937 billion, compared to US$582,9 million for the same period in 2017. All these are positive trends.

Without understati­ng our external obligation­s, these figures point to a good trend which if consolidat­ed and complement­ed by resolute fiscal consolidat­ion measures which were announced in the 2019 Budget, will certainly see our economy recovering much faster.

But the report also gives facts and figures Developmen­t Agency.

They were articulati­ng some of the reforms in terms of ease of doing business that were impressive.

Chief among those was the issue of technology to deal with applicatio­ns, monitoring projects, reviewing the projects and others.

And we are very keen to replicate some of those lessons. The Zimbabwe Special Economic Zones Authority has designated four areas, namely Bulawayo (which has got two zones) Beitbridge, Mutare and Victoria Falls.

We have designated Bulawayo as our industrial hub with superb comparativ­e advantages. We have designated Vic Falls as our finance and tourism hub; we have designated Beitbridge as logistics hub and Mutare our manufactur­ing and logistics hub.

What we are doing right now, together with the stakeholde­rs, particular­ly the provincial ministers is to which made a worrisome impression on my mind.

Our cash transactio­ns on imported consumptio­n goods for the same period stood at US$839,4 million. Although lower than the 2017 figure of US$1,055 billion, still this figure is too high.

It gets worrisome when read against the figure of US$883,5 million which we spent on capital goods, and another of US$705,5 million which we spent on intermedia­te goods imports.

Our spending on imported consumer goods should never come anywhere near our spending on capital and intermedia­te goods.

I raise this worry because our economy grows on greater investment­s on capital goods and intermedia­te goods. It cannot grow on consumer imports.

Linked to this are worries stoked by facts and figures on our merchandis­e exports.

I will confine myself to tobacco acquittals to make my point.

The country’s top 20 tobacco exporters accounted for nearly US$384 million as at mid-November.

Out of the 20, only four exported cigarettes, for a mere US$5,772 million.

The rest of the acquittals on our tobacco exports for the period, amounting to US$378,715 million, came from exports of unmanufact­ured tobacco.

This trend of commodity exports runs through almost all acquittals on our exports in agricultur­e and in mining. I shall not go into all the figures. Facts and figures on the country’s top 20 exporters in the manufactur­ing sector deliver more illustrati­ve lessons.

Top of the list of these companies is Suzan General Trading which manufactur­es jewellery for export. Its acquittals are worth US$38,5 million.

Next best is the fabrics and clothing exporter, Paramount Garment, which managed US$12,2 million.

Combined acquittals for exports of gold, diamonds and platinum, which Suzan Trading possibly uses to manufactur­e jewellery, amounted to US$2,3 billion!

The gap is staggering.

Climbing the Value Chain

From the foregoing, the story on our economy is stark and clear.

On the one hand we are spending precious foreign exchange on excessive imports of consumptio­n goods, while spending just a little more, or even far less on capital and intermedia­te goods respective­ly.

Secondly, we remain a primary commodity exporting economy, thus “expiring” at the very beginning of the value chain.

And considerin­g our low productivi­ty levels in mining, partly explained by under-investment in capital goods and in the acquisitio­n of modern technologi­es, it means we are far from our optimum even at that initial production stage of different value chains, that of mining in this case. develop very detailed implementa­tion plans.

These implementa­tion plans will cover issues of ownership, management of zones, feasibilit­y studies, master planning, and developmen­t of the infrastruc­ture and after that we talk about actual investors coming in.

This is a five-year project and we have started on it. We are going to go to all the 10 provinces.

But as we speak, the areas were we have gone, the provincial ministers have been amazing, including in the new areas where we are still working on.

In the provinces my teams are already identifyin­g land where we can set up and how the SEZs can be leveraged to enable provinces to take ownership of their own GDP.

It is aligned very square to the vision of the President that provinces must take ownership of their own GDP.

Yet comparativ­ely, jeweller Suzan General Trading, whose earnings from modest beneficiat­ion of our precious minerals, shows what we stand to gain should we invest more both at the initial mining production stage, and more resolutely up the value chain, to reach and decorate the “wrist”, the “chest” or the “neck”. Two lessons thus stand out. Firstly, we must step up productivi­ty at primary stage so our commodity outputs grow bigger.

Secondly, we must industrial­ise to move up global value chains through value addition and beneficiat­ion of our primary commoditie­s if our export performanc­e is to improve on the strength of global value chains.

Suzan shows there is a huge appetite for our value-added finished goods.

With improved export receipts, we are then able to meet our import requiremen­ts, including medicines, fuel and electricit­y which have been making headlines lately.

This, in my view, is the level at which the national focus and debate must be pitched.

Economic experts of all persuasion­s are now agreed that industrial­isation is the only historical­ly proven path to sustainabl­e economic growth and developmen­t.

No country in the world has developed without light manufactur­ing at the very minimum. Zimbabwe is no exception. Its reliance on primary commodity exports makes it a low-value economy which is acutely susceptibl­e to external price shocks, and to modest growth without inclusive developmen­t.

So, export earnings based on trade in primary commoditie­s cannot be the core of our national growth strategy. Yet it has been, with all the attendant ups and downs, highs and lows.

The remedy is clear: our economy cries out for depth, which is itself a function of a compact industrial policy backed by a

Coming out of China - whose economy spans high tech, manufactur­ing, tourism and logistics - we have begun to identify potential developers of infrastruc­ture into our own SEZs and we have tentativel­y agreed with the ICC-NDRC to help us in terms of developmen­t of infrastruc­ture.

Once the infrastruc­ture is developed, there are already investors ready to enter into those zones.

I must caution that SEZs are not quick fix, they are long term and China is bearing fruits of what they embarked on 40 years ago.

The President is talking about devolving power to provinces and making them responsibl­e for their GDPs.

The provinces can use different vehicles to stimulate their GDP and one such vehicle they can use is SEZs and they come with special benefits that they pass on to investors.

In turn investors should demonstrat­e good strategy of executing it.

The solution cannot lie in current industrial scattering­s which are not co-ordinated or built on demonstrab­le value chains.

A compact industrial policy must cause structural transforma­tion of the entire economy away from reliance on primary commodity production and trading.

It must gear us for entry into global value chains as an efficient, competitiv­e and innovative economy which reliably supplies global markets.

I emphasise the issue of efficiency in order to dispel the fetish around protective tariffs which our industrial­ists clamour for as an end in themselves.

Tariffs only deliver captive domestic markets; they do not necessaril­y deliver a competitiv­e edge in global value chains.

Arguably, this is why SI 122 has not given us the desired result in the more than two years of its duration. Quite the contrary, it may have bred smug complacenc­y and lack of innovative­ness from a sense of unconteste­d markets.

The global foreign currency receipts from January to mid-November stood at US$5,661 billion, compared to US$4,822 billion received during the same period last year . . . This week I will officially open the Lithium Carbonate Plant sited in Kwekwe. This comes hard on the heels of my launch of the Lithium Mining project in Goromonzi recently ...

Bridging the Skills Gap

National structural transforma­tions leading to global competitiv­eness thus require much more than protective tariffs or even comparativ­e advantages which can be static.

They require a dynamic national industrial­isation framework supported, by a good infrastruc­ture, macroecono­mic stability, good laws and policies on investment­s, and aggressive technology acquisitio­ns and innovation­s.

Above all, they require a knowledge economy which begets skills, and which narrows gaps to knowledge frontiers.

The just released 2018 National Critical Skills Audit Report shows there is a lot we need to do in this area. Here are the sobering findings. Except in the fields of business and commerce where there is a skills surplus of 121 percent, Zimbabwe sufferers from a debilitati­ng all-round skills deficit in the areas of engineerin­g and technology (-93,57 percent); natural and applied sciences (-96,91 percent); medical and health sciences (-95 percent) and, quite embarrassi­ngly, in agricultur­e (-88 percent), which is the backbone of our economy and the natural springboar­d for any industrial­isation policy and strategy.

All this creates a paradox where a country with a 94 percent literacy rate — one of the best on the continent — at the same time registers such a huge skills deficit.

This are the real issues which must grab our attention and focus.

Zimbabwe needs a compact industrial policy if her economy is to achieve structural transforma­tion.

Only countries that industrial­ise trade sustainabl­y.

2019 must thus see us move in the direction of a compact industrial policy, followed by a real industrial­isation strategy in order for us to attain our Vision 2030. to us how they will bring into the province FDI, export generation, skills transfer, employment creation, linkages to SMEs and how their own investment can beneficiat­e.

We are looking for those kind of investors and show us those key performanc­e indicators.

And that is how we will improve the performanc­e of the economies and ultimately that of the country.

We have done a lot studies and we now need to start from somewhere.

We need to have an industrial park or two that we begin to build and go out to attract the investors to come and use.

So, 2019 is the year we must begin to put actual infrastruc­ture for SEZs.

Obviously because of limited fiscal space we cannot do all the ten province at once but we need to start from somewhere.

We want to do a pilot project in 2019; it is our immediate goal.

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