DUKEM, Ethiopia: A steady drone of
machines hum as workers assemble shoes in a Chinese-built industrial
park outside Addis Ababa, the first in Ethiopia by the Asian giant
deepening its presence in Africa.
“The two sides have a commitment, they
say ‘you should have something, I should get something,’” said Qian
Guoqing, the deputy director of the Eastern Industry Zone. Huajian, one
of China’s biggest shoe manufacturers, plans to invest up to $2 billion
(1.5 billion euros) in Ethiopia to make shoes for export to Europe and
North America.
Construction of the industrial park started in 2009, and
rows of three-storey green and yellow buildings now stand on a patch of
the expansive land. The government says it plans to build five more
industrial zones throughout the country to attract further foreign
investment.
When completed in 2014, the $250 million
project will host over 80 factories and create 20,000 local jobs.
Currently six Chinese-run factories operate in the zone, including a car
assembly plant and a plastics factory. However, analysts say
large-scale investment in Ethiopia has risks and its financial benefits
are still uncertain.
“It’s not a risk-free strategy and it’s not
necessarily clear that it will work,” said Stefan Dercon, development
economist at Oxford University. “The Chinese… take the opportunities now
in Ethiopia where they make the trade-off between very high rewards.
That’s pretty risky in the first few years of doing this, and we’ll have
to wait and see.”
To minimize risks and attract investors,
the Ethiopian government is offering four-year tax breaks, cheap land
and free electricity to investors in the industrial zone. But challenges
abound: foreigners complain of poor telecommunications, overbearing
bureaucracy and the absence of a port in the landlocked Horn of Africa
country.
Cultural differences, the language barrier and a poor work
ethic among the locals also pose hurdles, said Paul Lu, Huajian’s human
resource manager, but noted that the availability of labor and raw
materials were key attractions. “We came to make shoes and we had to
consider the resources-Ethiopia is very rich in leather,” said Paul at
the factory’s entrance, where about two dozen people were waiting for
job interviews.
Attracting foreign investment is part of
Ethiopia’s lofty “Growth and Transformation Plan,” which aims to boost
economic growth and transform it into a middle-income country by 2025.
Dercon however voiced concern that Ethiopia might be moving too fast and
the plan could backfire, scaring off investors and creating financial
chaos.
“Arguably, they’re trying to run before they can walk,” he said.
Ethiopia will need to sustain high growth rates in order to pay off the
start-up investment, such as in infrastructure and electricity, argued
Dercon. “The risk is that they may not get another chance. If this
doesn’t work, the sentiment will go down very quickly, so the next two
or three years are crucial for this whole process.”
But State Minister for Industry, Tadesse
Haile, insisted that a quick pace was needed for development. “We have
to move fast, we have a very critical enemy, our enemy is poverty,”
Tadesse said. “Anybody who would ask us to slow down means to go along
with poverty.”
With annual economic output of $325 per person, according
to the United Nations, Ethiopia is one of the poorest African countries
and among the top aid recipients. Tadesse argued that investment will
help reverse the status. “It generates growth, it employs… and also you
can produce products that can be exported, generate foreign currency and
technology transfer,” he said. While the investment plans appear
attractive, some workers at Huajian complain of low salaries.
“The salary is not enough,” said Teju
Edek, 22, a quality controller at Huajian earning $30 a month. But he
admitted he is learning valuable skills at the factory. “We are here
because want to develop our knowledge of technology,” he said, adding
that he could earn more at some Ethiopian-run factories, but would not
pick up the same expertise.
For Tafere Getie, a manager at the
industrial zone, the investments will be more beneficial when management
and ownership are eventually transferred to Ethiopian hands. “I wish
that the Ethiopians who are working in foreign industries now will have
their own industries in 20 years.” – AFP
Source: Kuwait Times
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