Summary
- The advent of cheap, second-hand clothes imports in the 1980s put local apparel firms out of business.
- The government has been paying more attention to the sector in recent years, offering cheaper electricity to textile firms in export processing zones.
- The removal of sales taxes at a recent local sale resulted in thousands of consumers standing patiently in long lines for a chance to buy garments
Kenya has started offering tax
incentives to clothing companies, a key part of the country's
under-performing manufacturing sector, to create jobs and provide
affordable new clothes for shoppers.
Executives in the
textiles industry said the changes included allowing them to sell 20 per
cent of their annual production locally without sales taxes and without
paying import duties on the materials and equipment used to produce the
garments.
The advent of cheap, second-hand clothes
imports from the US and Europe, locally known as mitumba, in the 1980s,
put local apparel firms out of business and killed production of raw
materials like cotton.
"The manufacturing sector is
still facing some challenges in regards to cheap imports and the
counterfeit goods," said Mwangi Kiunjuri, the planning minister.
He
said they were dealing with the difficulties by implementing new
policies to encourage firms to boost production and hire more people.
The
government has been paying more attention to the sector in recent
years, offering cheaper electricity to textile firms in export
processing zones.
The removal of sales taxes at a
recent local sale resulted in thousands of consumers standing patiently
in long lines for a chance to buy garments, which are normally
exclusively exported to European and American retail chains.
Unemployment
Kenya
has the highest rate of youth joblessness in East Africa, the World
Bank said, with 17 per cent of all young people eligible for work
lacking jobs.
Neighbouring Tanzania and Uganda have comparable rates of 5.5 and 6.8 per cent respectively.
Formal
manufacturing accounted for 9 per cent of Kenya's $70 billion (around
Sh7 trillion) economic output last year, but it employed just 0.3
million people out of 45 million, official data showed this week.
Apart
from the job creation potential of boosting textile firms through the
initiative, officials said it could help dislodge mitumbas from their
dominant position. They estimated that 70 per cent of Kenyans cannot
afford new clothes.
"The core essence of what the
government is trying to do is trying to create a situation where you
have affordable new clothes available to Kenyans," said Jaswinder Bedi,
head of Bedi Investments, a Kenyan firm which exports clothes to high
fashion retailers in the West.
Beatrice Obwocha, a
Nairobi mother who bought jeans, blouses and children's clothes at
knockdown prices during last month's sale, said there was huge demand
for new, locally-made clothes.
"People were just getting in and buying a lot of stuff. Some even with sacks," she said of the sale that lasted a few days.
A new pair of jeans, which would normally cost about $35, about 3,500 shillings, went for $6 at the sale.
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