President Paul Kagame on a visit to the Special Economic Zone in Kigali last year. Photo/FILE
By BERNA NAMATA, The EastAfrican
In Summary
- C&H said it plans to invest up to $10 million in the next five years in the plant at the Kigali Special Economic Zone.
- C&H was among a group of Chinese firms that were in Rwanda last week to explore investment opportunities in textiles, shoes, mechatronics, industrial sewing machines and other sectors.
- The company, which supplies to US-based retail store Walmart and Target, plans to employ more people as it diversifies and increases its capacity to supply both regional and international market
Rwanda has become the latest beneficiary of
China’s move to shift its manufacturing base to Africa in the face of
rising labour costs at home, that are making the Asian country’s
products less competitive than before.
C&H, a Chinese garments company announced last
week that it plans to invest up to $10 million in the next five years
to set up a local textile plant in the Kigali Special Economic Zone.
“We will soon be shipping new equipment from China
and plan to recruit our initial 200 workers in September. We believe
that Rwanda can offer a strong and disciplined workforce for a
successful business exporting garments to both Europe and the US,” said
Helen Hai, one of the proprietors of C&H Garments Company, after
signing a memorandum of understanding with the government.
C&H was among a group of Chinese firms that
were in Rwanda last week to explore investment opportunities in
textiles, shoes, mechatronics, industrial sewing machines and other
sectors.
The company, which supplies to US-based retail
store Walmart and Target, plans to employ more people as it diversifies
and increases its capacity to supply both regional and international
markets.
“At the beginning we have to import a lot of raw
materials from abroad and focus on training. But the whole idea is to
build a supply chain,” said Ms Hai who also manages Hua Jian, a Chinese
shoe producer based in Ethiopia.
In the two years to 2012, Hua Jian employed 2,000
workers and exported $12 million worth of shoes to the US and EU making
it the largest shoe exporter in Ethiopia.
Rwanda is hoping Chinese companies will invest in
its budding manufacturing sector and help expand the export base beyond
tea, coffee, pyrethrum and minerals.
“We need to export finished goods …The people who
are good at this are the Chinese,” said Clare Akamanzi, the chief
operating officer of the Rwanda Development Board (RDB). “This company
is going to help us show other Chinese investors that it is possible to
invest in Rwanda.”
The finished products will be exported mainly to
the US where Rwanda is yet to significantly exploit the Africa Growth
and Opportunity Act (Agoa) window. Agoa provides quota and duty-free
entry into the US for certain goods from Africa including textiles and
apparels.
In 2013, RDB put official Chinese investment in Rwanda at $4.5 million.
In Africa, Chinese firms see an opportunity to maintain competitiveness in the export sector amid rising labour costs.
“China has been the factory of the world for many
years but with the economic development in the past few years, the wages
in China have grown from about $100 per month to about $600,” said
Henry Tan, the chief executive officer of Hong Kong based Luen Thai
Holdings Ltd, a consumer goods supplier with an annual revenue of over
$1.2 billion.
The minimum daily wage in Rwanda is Rwf100 ($0.14)
but on average casual workers are paid Rwf1,000 ($1.46) per day. The
minimum wage was set in 1978 and is set for review by the end of the
year with differentiation of compensation across sectors a key goal.
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