Prioritise EAC protocol on industrialisation

Peninnah Mbabazi

What you need to know:

  • With our good soils and fresh water in EAC, why would the region import processed animal feeds, chemicals given our fertiliser deposits, cement or even ceramics and glass?
  • Rather than being nearly net importers, we ought to strive for export based through value addition.
  • Else we continue to suffer balance of payment deficits and parading begging bowels to the Western world and China.

The East African Community (EAC) has made positive strides to anchor economic development. Most of the investment seems to be under infrastructural development interventions, including the Northern Corridor Integration Projects (NCIP) – covering railways, roads and energy sectors. This is one step.
The East African Community has been among the fastest growing regions with about 6.5 per cent economic growth in sub-Saharan Africa in the past decades. Regional integration has been at the fore of this growth, as the member states foster economic development.

The EAC economies by way of household employment are dominated by agriculture which is the core economic sector employing 90 per cent of their respective populations and accounting for 24 per cent to 46 per cent of gross domestic product (GDP). Meanwhile, the EAC remains a net importer of manufactured products.
So how do we reverse this and anchor locally based industrial sector? What would it take for local manufacture and assembly of electronics like motor vehicles, electric circuit breakers and fittings, cookers, dry cells, solar panels and machine parts?
How do we leverage petroleum related products such as plastics and other products?

Whereas opportunities do exist in large scale farming, irrigation, value addition; processing, pre-packing and specialisation, in order to exploit regional and international markets, the opportunity for industrial growth is not being strengthened in locally producing quality inputs for use in the agricultural sector.
With our good soils and fresh water in EAC, why would the region import processed animal feeds, chemicals given our fertiliser deposits, cement or even ceramics and glass? Rather than being nearly net importers, we ought to strive for export based through value addition. Else we continue to suffer balance of payment deficits and parading begging bowels to the Western world and China.
Opportunities do exist in large scale fish farming, irrigation, and agro-processing, packing materials, mineral wealth to benefit the regional and international markets.

With the development of the EAC regional industrialisation policy that sets direction for sustainable and equitable industrial development in East Africa. The policy aims to transform the region to modern industrial economies through high value addition industries, increase of manufactured exports, export earnings, employment and purchasing power, product diversification, increase linkages with other economic sectors and through technical skills for modernisation and higher productivity.
It proposes the establishment of regional industries to drive industrial growth and stresses strong linkages between industries and key sectors of the economy such as agriculture, infrastructure, and energy, among others. In terms of export-oriented policies which the EAC countries like Uganda can learn from developed countries such as Singapore, Taiwan, Hong Kong, and Korea.

Uganda being part of the EAC needs to improve competitiveness of industrial sector to enhance expansion of trade in industrial goods within the community and for exports.
Flagship approach as so far seen under Northern Corridor Integration Projects, factories and industries on such will deliberately operationalise and accelerate ambitions of Articles 79 and 80 of the EAC Treaty) and the EAC Industrialisation Policy and Strategy (2010-2030). Then we can spur forward and backward linkages for economic transformation at EAC. In conclusion, the EAC economies cannot continue to be merely importers of manufactured goods from the rest of the world.

Ms Mbabazi works at Uganda Debt Network, [email protected]