Type | Report |
Title | Manufacturing FDI in Sub-Saharan Africa |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2015 |
URL | https://openknowledge.worldbank.org/bitstream/handle/10986/22352/Manufacturing00minants00and0impacts.pdf?sequence=1 |
Abstract | Africa has lagged behind in industrialization; the lack of industrial development has been partially related to the challenge of attracting sufficient foreign direct investment (FDI). In 2013, the average share of manufacturing value added in GDP in Sub-Saharan Africa was 11 percent, almost unchanged from the 1990s. At the same time, the share of the worldwide FDI flows into SSA has been rather low during the same period. In the Action Plan for the Accelerated Industrial Development of Africa (AIDA) that were adopted by all the member governments of the African Union in January 2008, the importance of manufacturing development was reiterated and attracting foreign investment was identified as the major priority for the acceleration of Africa’s industrialization. Compared to the past, FDI into Africa is relatively high and more diverse than ever before. FDI flows into SSA have expanded almost six-fold since 2000, reaching a record US$45 billion and leading to a significantly higher FDI stock (US$474 billion) in 2013. Still, FDI into Africa is only a fraction of world FDI flows. The more diversified nature manifests in several dimensions: First, FDI into Africa is slowly shifting from extractive sectors to services and manufacturing sectors. Second, FDI reached a larger geographic scope over the past five years, with increasing shares received by Southern and Eastern Africa. Third, there is a significant increase of South-South FDI, including that from new partners led by China, India, and Brazil, and intraregional partners led by South Africa. Manufacturing FDI reflects similar diversification patterns and some African countries such as Ethiopia are building up their manufacturing bases by attracting FDI from new partners. FDI has proven useful in the past to advance economic development and foster structural change in host countries. Recent literature and empirical evidence suggests due consideration is needed from policy makers to maximize benefits of FDI, such as skills and technological transfer, and foster overall spillover effects to the domestic economy. These arguments are strongly supported by the practical experiences of East Asian Tigers and of China, where FDI contributed significantly to the upgrading and diversification of its industrial structure. A wide variety of polices to maintain macroeconomic stability, increase trade openness, and accelerate the growth of advanced industries were implemented. The evaluation is assumed to vary depending on country, sector, and the actual drivers of FDI. Manufacturing FDI in SSA is primarily market-seeking. There are three main types—resourceseeking, market-seeking and efficiency-seeking—when looking at FDI in Africa. In reality there are overlaps in these three types. Manufacturing FDI in SSA is mainly market-seeking and its main determinants are market size and market potential. In addition, political and economic stability are important factors considered by foreign manufacturers when they choose the investment location. On the other hand, efficiency-seeking FDI, observed at firm level, is the smaller part of manufacturing FDI in Africa since only a handful of foreign companies are able to take advantage of lower production cost in some manufacturing areas only, such as textile and clothing, and leather and footwear. Manufacturing FDI in Africa remains relatively undiversified, focusing on raw material (food) processing or end-product assembly, which are characterized by low value addition, even in those countries that manage to attract significant inflows. In addition, some manufacturing production areas are more successful in attracting foreign investors than others. Those areas differ by host countries. For example, in the last decade, some emerging subsectors included textile and clothing, and leather and footwear in Ethiopia; non-metallic mineral products and motor vehicles and other transport equipment in Kenya; metal products and non-metallic mineral products in Tanzania; metal products and non-metallic mineral products in Uganda; and non-metallic mineral products and publishing and printing in Rwanda. In addition, FDI is traditionally concentrated in the food and beverage subsector in most of the countries. This concentration in low value addition activities may be appropriate in the short run, however, as it is likely to be a first step for economies to integrate into Global Value Chains (GVCs) through exploiting their comparative advantages. Non-traditional sources dominate FDI in Africa. New partners and African partners have been the main sources of manufacturing FDI. Traditional sources of manufacturing FDI are shrinking but still account for large stocks. The share of investment from China and India increased rapidly, gradually taking over the proportion of investment originating from the EU and the U.S. Intraregional investment continued to soar and largely contributed to the rebound of Africa FDI to the pre-crisis level. While FDI into Africa generally tends to have relatively high returns of investments, likely reflecting the high risk and low competition environment, profitability in manufacturing is generally even higher compared to other sectors. Recent evidence shows that the overall rate of return of FDI in Africa has been above 9 percent since 2006, higher than the world average of 7.5 percent and developing country average of 8.1 (data for 2011). On the other hand, in Rwanda, manufacturing realized an average return to equity of 24 percent in 2013. This result also partly explains what drives manufacturing FDI from new partners into SSA. Investors from emerging countries are more accustomed to less supportive institutional environments, and many are more adapted entrepreneurs in high-risk environments. Manufacturing FDI creates more jobs than FDI in any other sector. Manufacturing has led in job creation among sectors in the reviewed SSA countries such as Tanzania, Uganda, and Ethiopia. According to the most recent FDI data (2013/14), the manufacturing sector in Tanzania accounted for 43 percent of total jobs created, three times more than jobs created in agriculture. Manufacturing FDI also achieved the largest job creation in Uganda in 2012, amounting to 30 percent of the total FDI-driven jobs. Similar patterns are also recognizable in Ethiopia, especially in terms of permanent employment creation. A significant portion of employment opportunities in manufacturing is attributed to non-traditional investors. However, formal training remains insufficient in manufacturing firms. Unstable supply of inputs and uncertainty of time required for transport and logistics build a binding constraint for manufacturing FDI in Africa. Drawing from empirical evidence and investors’ perception, some binding constraints are identified as critical to further improve the performance of manufacturing FDI. The dependence on imported production inputs, erratic electricity supply, and poor trade logistics drive the cost up and pose the threat to the sustainability of FDI. These bottlenecks also lead to production inefficiencies that constrains Africa’s integration into the global value chain. The Ethiopian and Rwandan case studies suggest that the regulatory business climate is attractive for FDI and contributes to the rate of project operationalization. For many manufacturers who are increasingly looking for new destinations to maintain lower cost for their labor-intensive industries, the registration and preparation process is often an experiment to find the most suitable location in which to invest. As such, the low rate of conversion to operability in Ethiopia from the registered projects suggests that some discouraged investors had likely withdrawn after initial setbacks, indicating that improving investor care in some priority sectors is an urgent task to support FDI. |
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