PRESIDENT John Magufuli wants the manufacturing sector to control a lion’s share of workable population and contribution to the economy in the next four years.
He said in Dar es Salaam yesterday that
his government is rallying behind the manufacturing sector and want its
share of employment to the society to reach 40 per cent from current 7.3
per cent -- while its contribution to GDP reaching 15 per cent by 2020.
“We (at government level) will do
whatever within our power to support the sector development and growth…
as the nation cannot flourish without industries. “CTI (Confederation of
Tanzania Industries) should act as catalyst and ambassador for the
sector growth.
We have formed a special regulatory
reference committee to work out and advise us on how best to follow up
industrial development,” Dr Magufuli said.
The president was speaking at the CTI
President’s Manufacturer of the Year Awards (PMAYA) 2015 in the city
where TBL scooped an overall best manufacture of the year while Kioo
Limited was first runner-up. Alaf Limited emerged second runner-up.
He explained how keen the government
wants to develop the sector to be the leading one in revenue collection,
employment, job creation and GDP contribution.
To achieve this, the president directed
the Minister for Trade, Industry and Investment, Mr Charles Mwijage, to
make sure taxes on local made products are reduced considerably.
“The good thing is that the Minister for
Trade is here, please make sure taxes on local produced goods are very
low to enable them compete and flourish,” Dr Magufuli remarked amid
cheers from manufacturers.
He further told his audience that the
government would make sure infrastructure and energy bottlenecks are
addressed in the shortest possible period as they slowed the speed of
doing business and chocking profitability.
“I want a win-win situation in which the
government gets its taxes, industrial profits, jobs and agro-markets…
this is possible if we would work together,” Dr Magufuli stressed.
He said that he wants Tanzanians to be
given priority in every aspect and assisted to become industrialists. He
warned that whoever in the government would go against this move will
be fired.
Earlier, the Minister for Trade,
Industry and Investment, Mr Charles Mwijage, told industrialists that
the second master plan for industrial development seeks to add value to
the country’s agroproduce.
“We will start with leather and cotton;
from weaving to garment, sunflower oil and legume-related seeds… this
way we’ll help farmers to access a ready market,” Mr Mwijage pointed
out.
The CTI Chairman, Dr Samwel Nyantahe,
told the president that the sector growth was dwarfed by a lengthy wave
of overlapping taxes and regulatory authorities.
“We have started to see some
improvement; but challenges on infrastructure, high energy costs and
poor quality of electricity still hinder our growth,” he stressed.
The Executive Director of Tanzania
Private Sector Foundation (TPSF), Mr Godfrey Simbeye, said the president
was sincerely committed to developing the sector and building a strong
bondage between the government and industrialists.
“Another good aspect is the fact that
the president wants Tanzania to be an industrial nation; this is a very
important gesture as he want us to own the economy,” Mr Simbeye told the
‘Daily News’.
Tanzania National Business Council
Executive Director Engineer Raymond Mbilinyi said the president has
shown heavy commitment on the industrial growth, which itself was a big
boost to the sector.
“The president’s assurance… of having a
sound infrastructure (roads and railways) system, good industrial
environment and, most importantly, correcting soft policy on industries,
will make the sector leap forward,” Mr Mbilinyi told this reporter.
Bank M Chief Executive Officer
(designate) Jacqueline Woiso said the bank will continue with its
commitment to support the development of the sector. “We will make sure
that we lend the sector at very affordable rate…and they know that. We
will also increase our lending,” Ms Woiso said.
Bank M was the largest sponsor of the
event. Tanzania has some 20,000 industries -- large and medium scale --
and the number is envisaged to grow further should the government
address some of the bottlenecks hindering the sector’s growth
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