Indian High Commissioner Binaya Pradhan speaks during a business symposium in Arusha at the weekend. With him are Arusha Regional Commissioner John Mongella (centre) and Minerals deputy minister Stephen Kiruswa. PHOTO | COURTESY
Summary
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“The more
we trade raw items, the more vulnerable we remain to the unpredictability of
price fluctuations” said the Arusha Regional Commissioner John Mongella
Arusha. Local exporters have been advised to add value to their products instead of selling them in
raw form.Raw exports not only fetched lower
prices in the international markets but were vulnerable to unpredictability of
price fluctuations.
“The more we trade raw items, the
more vulnerable we remain to the unpredictability of price fluctuations” said
the Arusha Regional Commissioner John Mongella.
He raised the concern during a
business symposium organised by Tanzania India Business Forum (TIBF) in
collaboration with other business stakeholders here on Saturday.
TIBF was formed two years ago to
facilitate bilateral trade between the two nations which is expected to cross
over $5 billion this year.
Mr Mongella said trade between
Tanzania and India has remarkably progressed to the tune worth $ 4.5 billion in
2021/22.
However, much as he appreciated the
blossoming trade which has made the nations much closer, he was concerned by
the quality of exports from Tanzania.
“Most of the items exported from
Tanzania to India are primarily in a raw state unlike those imported from India
to Tanzania,” he said.
The leading exports to India from
Tanzania include cashew nuts, cotton link, jute, chicken peas, dried peas,
pigeon peas, hides and skins tropical wood and raw gold.
“Our imports from India are usually
manufactured goods and services,” he told business stakeholders at an Arusha
hotel.
They have mostly been pharmaceuticals,
medicaments, vaccines, caustic soda, industrial sugar, motorcycles and jet
fuel.
“Principles of economics have taught
us that the more we trade raw items, the more vulnerable we remain to the
unpredictability of price fluctuations,” he said.
He called on the business symposium
to set the stage for the private sector from both countries to appreciate
technological progress made in India.
Mr Mongella said although Tanzania’s
economy was “predominantly agrarian”, there was room for manufacturing value
addition (MVA) especially for the leading strategic crops.
These are cashew, coffee, cotton,
palm, pyrethrum, sisal, tea and tobacco which, according to him, have “an
economic opportunity for investors”.
He affirmed that the Arusha regional
secretariat was ready to facilitate potential investors, from India and
elsewhere “to come and invest”.
The Indian High Commissioner to
Tanzania, Mr Binaya Pradhan, said his country and Tanzania share vibrant
economic and commercial ties.
He described a recent decision by
the two countries to trade in their own currencies – the Tanzanian shilling and
Indian rupee – as a testimony to increase economic ties.
India is the third largest trading
partner of Tanzania with bilateral trade of $4.58 billion in 2021/22 and set to
cross over $5 billion in 2023.
India is also among the top five
investment sources in Tanzania and as per Tanzania Investment Centre (TIC), it
has investments worth $ 3.74 billion.
Avocados have joined the list of
agricultural-based exports from Tanzania to enter the Indian market with the
first consignment sent in January 2022.
Mr Pradhan added that India was set
to increase its investments to Tanzania in technology, manufacturing and
engineering sectors.
Already several reputed companies
from the fast rising Asian economic giant are operating in the country in
engineering and allied projects.
His country’s investments will
extend to ICT and the mining sector given that India now has a fairly developed
technology sector.
With advancement of existing and
emerging technologies, engineering and industrial development will define the
coming investments, he stated.
“Our investments will extend to the
wood, mining and pharmaceutical sectors,” he told dozens of business
stakeholders including high ranking officials of the Indian High Commission to
Tanzania and TIBF.
They included those from the East
African Chamber of Commerce, Industry and Agriculture (EACCIA) and the Arusha
chapter of Tanzania Chamber of Commerce, Industry and Agriculture (TCCIA).
Mr Pradhan added that several
reputed Indian companies are already operating in Tanzania in the engineering
and allied sectors.
These include L&T, Megha
Engineering and Afcons which are implementing water projects in the Mainland
and Zanzibar.
According to the High Commissioner,
Indian- supported water projects worth $500 million, covering several towns in
Tanzania will begin soon.
India is also offering capacity
building training to Tanzanian professionals under its ITEC programme, with
4,500 professionals already trained there.
The proposed Institute of Technology
in Zanzibar, now in the final stages of construction, was cited as one of
India’s support to Tanzania in the ICT sector.
The symposium was also informed that
the two nations have signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) on value
addition technologies in the minerals.
Under the deal, Indian companies
will assist the local firms to develop skills in mineral polishing, lapidary
and gemmology.
Tanzania was keen to tap technical
expertise from India in mineral processing, including strategic minerals such
as graphite, copper and nickel.
TCCIA chairman for the Arusha
chapter Walter Maeda said Tanzania has a great potential in the agribusiness
sector and implored India to extend the necessary support.
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