BOTS B D ELOP SWANA DEVE PMEN NT POLICCY R IEW REVI A Agend An mpet da for Com eness and titive d Diver cation D rsific Report Number: 73049-BW D Document of the World Bank o S er 2012 Septembe his documen Th nt has a rest ibution and may be used tricted distri t performa d by recipients only in the ance of heir official d th ontents may duties. Its co y not otherw wise be disclo osed withou ation. ut World Bank authoriza CURRENCY EQUIVALENTS (Exchange Rate as of May 21, 2012) Currency Unit = Botswana Pula US$ 1.00 = BWP 7.7 GOVERNMENT FISCAL YEAR April 1 – March 31 Vice President: Makhtar Diop Country Director: Ruth Kagia Sector Director: Marcelo Guigale Sector Manager: John Panzer Team Leaders: Zeinab Partow, Richard Newfarmer 2 Acknowledgments This Report has been prepared by a team consisting of Zeinab Partow (Team Leader, PRMED), Richard Newfarmer (Co-Team Leader, Consultant), Kevin Donovan (InfoDev), Thomas Farole (PRMTR), Elisa Gamberoni (PRMGE), Joseph Goldberg (Consultant), Keith Jefferis (Consultant), Tim Kelly (InfoDev), Tshepo Kgare (Consultant), Hannah Messerli (AFTFE), Yaw Nyampong (Consultant), Charles Schlumberger (TWITR), John Strongman (Consultant), Anton van Engelen (Consultant), and Brad Weiss (Consultant). Chad Bown (DECTI), Paul Brenton (AFTPM), Indira Ekanayake (AFTAR), Margaret McMillan, and Brian McCaig also provided very useful contributions. Very special thanks for their time and invaluable advice and contributions also go to Nick Charalambides and Roman Grynberg. Melanie Jaya (AFCS1), Sediba Majinda (AFMBW), and Anna Mary Esterhuizen (AFMBW) provided excellent assistance in the logistics and planning of missions and workshops. Many thanks to Adjoa Apete (AFRBC), Rita Itoro-Godfrey(AFTP1), Francoise Mukamana, and Sara Sundaram (AFTP1) for their help with systems and contracts. We wish to express our sincere gratitude to our counterparts in the Government of Botswana for their help and support during the preparation of this Report. The National Strategy Office, The Ministry of Trade and Industry, and the Botswana Unified Revenue Service were especially generous with their time and information. We also especially wish to thank the participants, chairs and discussants at a dissemination workshop held in Gaborone on November 7 and 8, 2011 for their insights, comments and suggestions. Thanks also go in particular to Misuzu Otsuka (AFTP1), Chunlin Zhang (AFTFE), Tazeen Fasih (AFTED), Constantine Chikosi (AFMBW), and Irina Astrakhan (AFTFE) for their time and thoughtful inputs into the preparation of the workshop and the discussions with authorities. Thanks are also due to the peer reviewers: Paul Brenton (AFTPM), Jose Guilherme Reis (PRMTR), and Ricardo Hausmann (Center for International Development and Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University. The Report was prepared under the guidance of John Panzer, Sector Manager, AFTP1 and Ruth Kagia, Country Director (AFCS1). 3 List of Acronyms AB Air Botswana CEDA Citizen Entrepreneurship AD Anti-Dumping Development Agency ACGS Agricultural Credit Guarantee CET Common External Tariff Scheme CI Conservation International ACT Additional Company Tax COMESA Common Market for Eastern ADS Approved Destination Status and Southern Africa AfDB African Development Bank CRASA Communication Regulators’ BAMB Botswana Agricultural Marketing Association of Southern Africa Board CSO Central Statistics Organization BCPA Botswana Cattle Producers DAO Development Approval Order Association DMO Destination Management BEDIA Botswana Export Development and Organization Investment Authority DOL Department of Lands BDC Botswana Development Corporation DOT Department of Tourism BECI Botswana Export Credit Insurance DTA Double Taxation Agreement BEMA Botswana Exporters and DVS Department of Veterinary Services Manufacturers Association EASSy Eastern Africa Submarine Cable BES Botswana Excellence Strategy System BHC Botswana Housing Corporation EDD Economic Diversification Drive BIH Botswana Innovation Hub EDP Export Development Programme BIDPA Botswana Institute for Development EPA Economic Partnership Agreement Policy Analysis EU European Union BITC Botswana Investment and Trade FAP Financial Assistance Policy Centre FDI Foreign Direct Investment BMC Botswana Meat Corporation FIAS Foreign Investment Advisory BNPC Botswana National Productivity Service Center FIT Foreign Independent Traveler BOBS Botswana Bureau of Standards FMD Foot and Mouth Disease BOCCIM Botswana Confederation of GDP Gross Domestic Product Commerce, Industry and Manpower GICO Government Implementation and BOCOBONET Botswana Community Coordination Office Based Organizations Network HATAB Hospitality and Tourism BOTA Botswana Training Authority Association of Botswana BPC Botswana Power Corporation ICT Information and Communication BPO Business Process Outsourcing Technology BR Botswana Railways IDP Industrial Development Policy BSB Botswana Savings Bank IEPA Interim Economic Partnership BT Botswana Tourism Agreement BTA Botswana Telecommunications IFSC International Financial Services Authority Centre BTC Botswana Telecommunications IPP Independent Power Producer Corporation ISPAAD Integrated Support Programme BTO Botswana Tourism Organisation for Arable Agriculture Development BURS Botswana Unified Revenue Service ITU International Telecommunication BWP Botswana Pula Union CAAB Civil Aviation Authority of IUCN International Union for Botswana Conservation of Nature CAP Common Agricultural Policy LEA Local Enterprise Authority CBNRM Community Based Natural L/C Letters of Credit Resource Management LIMID Livestock Management and CBO Community-based organization Infrastructure Development LPI Logistics Performance Index SNV Netherlands Development MCC Millennium Challenge Corporation Organization MEWT Ministry of Environment, Wildlife, SOE State-Owned Enterprise and Tourism SPS Sanitary and Phyto-Sanitary MFN Most-Favored Nation SPV Special Purpose Vehicle MOU Memorandum of Understanding SSA Sub-Saharan Africa NAFTA North American Free Trade SSKIA Sir Seretse Khama International Agreement Airport NAMPAADD National Master Plan for STRI Services Trade Restrictiveness Arable Agriculture and Dairy Index Development TFP Total Factor Productivity NDB National Development Bank TSA Tourism Satellite Account NEF National Environmental Fund TT Travel & Tourism NES National Export Strategy TTCI Travel & Tourism Competitiveness NGO Non-governmental Organization Index NSO National Strategy Office UHT Ultra-High Temperature NTB Non-Tariff Barrier UNCTAD United Nations Conference on OECD Organization for Economic Co- Trade and Development operation and Development UNWTO United Nations World Tourism OTRI Overall Trade Restrictiveness Organization Indicator VAT Value Added Tax RETOSA Regional Tourism Organization VFR Visiting Friends and Relatives of Southern Africa WACS West Africa Cable System RIT Regional Independent Traveler WBG World Bank Group ROO Rules of Origin WEF World Economic Forum SACU Southern African Customs Union WHT Withholding Tax SADC Southern African Development WTTC World Travel & Tourism Council Community WUC Water Utilities Corporation SAE South African Express WWF World Wildlife Fund SAPP Southern African Power Pool ZAR South African Rand SEZ Special Economic Zone SME Small and Medium Enterprise 2 Contents Executive Summary......................................................................................................................... 3 Success at a Turning Point .......................................................................................................... 3 The Agenda: Align incentives, reduce services costs, and vigorously promote exports ........... 7 Policy Recommendations: An Agenda for Competitiveness and Diversification ................. 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Chapter 1: From Diamonds to New Sources of Growth, New Exports, New Markets .................. 22 Declining Growth Momentum .................................................................................................. 22 Failing Policy Momentum ......................................................................................................... 23 Trade Performance: Success… and Vulnerabilities ................................................................... 24 Roots of Underperformance..................................................................................................... 33 Policy spurs to diversification: .................................................................................................. 36 Aligning incentives, reducing services costs, and promoting exports ...................................... 36 Chapter 2: Reshaping Industrial Policies to Promote Competiveness and Diversification ........... 38 Key Policies and Strategies ....................................................................................................... 38 Taxation and Incentives ............................................................................................................ 41 Subsidies ................................................................................................................................... 43 Other Policies: Local Preference, Investment Promotion and Price Controls .......................... 47 Trade Measures ........................................................................................................................ 49 The Balance: Incentives’ Costs, Benefits and Options for Reform ........................................... 50 Chapter 3: Disincentives to Export: the Trade Regime ................................................................. 56 Price Incentives to Exporters: The Role of Trade Policy ........................................................... 56 SACU Trade Policy and Merchandise Exports ........................................................................... 56 Unilateral Policies: Nontariff Barriers ....................................................................................... 61 Trade in Services ....................................................................................................................... 61 Gaining Access to Foreign Markets: Improving Regional Agreements .................................... 65 The Trade Policy Agenda: A Summary of Options .................................................................... 68 Chapter 4: Reducing the Costs of Key Backbone Services ............................................................ 71 A Reformed ICT Sector for Competitiveness and Diversification in Botswana ......................... 71 Air Transport and Diversification in Botswana ......................................................................... 78 Road Transport: From Landlocked to Regional Hub? ............................................................... 82 Chapter 5: Creating New Dynamism in Traditional Sectors .......................................................... 87 Competitiveness and Sustainability of the Livestock and Beef Sector ..................................... 87 Stimulating Sustainable Growth in the Botswana Tourism Industry ...................................... 100 Chapter 6: Promoting Exports to Spur Diversification ................................................................ 114 Export Promotion Institutions ................................................................................................ 114 Promotion Challenges Across the Export Chain ..................................................................... 116 Effectiveness of export promotion: performance and constraints ........................................ 122 Special Economic Zones: Can They Help? ............................................................................... 124 Policy Options to Improve Effectiveness of Export Promotion .............................................. 125 Standard (e.g. services, construction) ......................................................................................... 150 2 Executive Summary Success at a Turning Point Botswana has been one of the most successful countries in the developing world over the last 40 years by many measures. Incomes have grown at a sustained pace, poverty has fallen, and the citizenry has become more educated. To be sure, poverty and income inequalities remain a problem, but rising standards of living have meant a better life for this generation of Batswana than any before it. The question facing the country’s leadership is whether this commendable performance can be sustained into the next generation. There are clouds on the horizon that cannot be ignored. Diamond earnings, the life blood of decades of prosperity, have flattened out. In per capita terms they are falling. Moreover, because revenues from diamonds going to the public sector have been falling for more than a decade, a growth model predicated upon an ever-expanding state presence is not viable. Diamond earnings accruing to the state for subsequent redistribution have peaked. Employment and wages in the public sector have reached their natural limits as a share of GDP; recycling revenues from mining into the private sector, either directly or through the financial sector, has been inefficient with low social returns; and redistributive mechanisms to support social safety nets are also likely be approaching their limits. The country confronts the challenge of looking for new sources of growth outside of government. Past efforts to use diamond earnings to diversify the non-mining economy have yielded only partial success. To be sure, earnings have been invested wisely in infrastructure, health and education, and so relative to most comparators in Africa, Botswana is positioned to do well. However, the non-mining private economy lags the level of professionalism, skill development, and productivity found in the diamond sector. Non-mineral exports as a share of the non-mining economy are stagnant or falling. Exports other than diamonds are slow-growing, and remain highly concentrated in a few mining products. Moreover, in comparison with other middle- income countries, new exports from Botswana have a higher probability of early death in foreign markets – only 62 percent of new exports survive into the second year. Botswana’s exports have a lower penetration of foreign markets importing the product it exports than Uganda. Meanwhile, only ten percent of Botswana firms export anything at all. While some of this can be ascribed to a productive sector of smaller less productive firms outside of minerals, even firms in Rwanda, with its lower per capita income and much smaller firms, export more at 12%. To be sure, part of this is due to the success of diamonds and to the inherent limitations of Botswana’s productive structure, populated with small firms in a landlocked country. Flagging policy momentum But that is all the more reason why policy has to be actively supportive of the diversification enterprise. Here, recent policy momentum does not inspire confidence. In survey after survey, Botswana’s policy environment has fallen in global rankings of countries. According to the World Bank Doing Business rankings, the WEF rankings of competitiveness, or other global indices, Botswana has been slipping. This is not because Botswana’s policy environment is in general deteriorating; rather it is that other countries – from Rwanda to Mauritius – have been improving more rapidly than Botswana. While Botswana’s aggregate ranking with respect to Sub-Saharan African peers, performance is poor is a number of areas of the Doing Business index, such as trading across borders and dealing with construction permits. Less well known is the fact that Botswana has also fallen behind other countries in some of the sectoral measures of good policy. In tourism rankings, for example, lack of high-level attention has driven down 3 Botswana’s attractiveness; in air transportation, the country has recorded worrisome scores in several rankings associated with safety; and in ICT, Botswana has also slipped in the rankings for broadband connectivity. Part of the policy puzzle is that implementation of potentially beneficial policies is glacially slow – such as the privatization of the BTC, implementation of SEZs, the one-stop shop for investment, or the 24 hour border post. Of the 70 recommendations made in the BIDPA/World Bank 2005 report on competitiveness, two thirds were never implemented and there was policy reversal in ten percent of the reform areas. No doubt policymakers found some of these recommendations unsuitable for Botswana, and that explains part of the lack of implementation. But even the agendas supported by key government policy documents, such as the Botswana Excellence Strategy, suffer from slow implementation and policy reversals. Indeed, one cost of past success has been a lack of urgency in implementing new policies and may partly explain flagging policy implementation. The lack of urgency has in turn allowed bureaucratic or political interests to sidetrack policy implementation. While it is often not difficult to identify the barriers to improving economic and social outcomes, the difficulty lies in finding the political will to remove those barriers: continuing divisions among policy-makers regarding the path Botswana should follow – openness or protectionism - have further slowed the impetus for reform. One of the reasons to protect some industries in the country may be protection of jobs, but this can only be achieved at significant costs per job created. Unless reforms enable Botswana to generate jobs with high productivity, the protection of jobs in uncompetitive sectors cannot address the high unemployment in the country. Limited avenues for communication and the exchange of ideas and experience between government and the private sector may be another explanation, affecting government’s understanding of the constraints faced by businesses and how to respond to them. Today, with diamonds losing their dynamism, the search for new sources of growth is becoming urgent. It is against this backdrop that the Government of Botswana invited the World Bank to review its efforts to diversify the economy. A Strategic Vision Botswana has considerable assets upon which to build a new basis for growth. Abundant mineral resources, wildlife and natural attractions conducive to tourism, low labor-to-land ratios, and good education indicators for its populace constitute important endowments. Moreover, its culture and politics of low corruption is attractive to private investment in many activities. And Botswana has created a participatory governance that anchors its policies in a framework of political stability equaled in only a few other African countries. The country can harness its assets to further develop its mining sector, increase value-added in minerals, build a diversified services sector - including tourism, transportation services, and even air transport- and expand niche manufacturing activities. But to attain its potential, Botswana needs to attract and support players focused on the external market. Firms focused on the small domestic market will simply not generate sufficient dynamism and growth to substitute for a shrinking diamond sector. Botswana can do this by differentiating itself with coherent incentives for firms to compete and export, liberal policies for high-skilled immigration, foreign direct investment, and entrepreneurship, and by offering high- quality, low cost electricity, telecommunications and other infrastructure. Key to this will be using Botswana’s governance skills to implement more facilitating regulation to allow its firms to compete more effectively in regional, and eventually, global markets. One of the greatest comparative advantages that Botswana enjoys is its location next to the largest market in Africa. Moreover, because of the customs union arrangements in SACU, it enjoys 4 privileged access to that market. This creates the opportunities for Botswana enterprises to participate in production chains and other new forms of international trade that have opened up with falling transportation and telecommunications costs. Its location also puts Botswana at the crossroads linking South African producers with the fast growing market to its North, and throughout SADC. These advantages are not being exploited today as Botswana exports only a very narrow range of goods to the South African market despite the fact that South Africa is a major importer of a wide variety of manufactured and agricultural products, and one whose imports have grown strongly year on year for the past decade. Second, for the goods that it does export to South Africa, Botswana is a very minor player with a minute share of the South African market. 1 To be sure, the country has only two million inhabitants. But small size can also be an advantage. A few small niche exports can lift everyone’s incomes. One needs only to look at Singapore, Barbados, or, closer to home, Mauritius, to realize that these countries grew at fast rates over long periods by opening their markets to competition, and allowing a few firms to develop expertise and skills that exploited their location and other advantages. Because Botswana is relatively small, it need only develop a few activities that give its firms a competitive advantage relative to South Africa. Botswana can also build on its history of success in creating comparative advantage: its management of natural resources in diamond mining has produced not only stable, high growth for four decades, but with it a coterie of skilled engineers and managers that is world class in mining expertise. Government policymakers have displayed a competence in negotiation with foreign companies to obtain the very best from sectoral openness. This history provides the basis for attracting greater foreign investment in future projects in copper, nickel, coal and other minerals yet to be discovered. All of these augur a bright future for Botswana. Doing this, however, requires implementing a coherent program to raise competitiveness. Indeed, the program set out in Botswana Excellence – National Strategy for Economic Diversification and Growth (BES, 2008) provides the basis for this approach. The BES contains a vision of ways Botswana could harness globalization to improve its competitiveness and drive diversification: “The implementation of the Strategy and the Action Plan requires Government to recognize the imperative of speedy diversification, as well as an internationally competitive economy. For success to be achieved, Government has to be prepared to amend, or even abandon, those policies that may have proved to be unsuccessful in the past, and to embrace the principle of openness. Openness, as used in this Strategy, relates to two-way flow between Botswana and other countries in the context of: trade; investment; information; technology; and skills flows as Botswana integrates with the international economy.� Implementing some of the suggestions in this report requires that the economic cabinet collectively “own� the strategy. It requires mobilizing a cabinet-level consensus around the ideas that competition can help drive productivity increases, that shielding enterprises and activities from market forces most often drags down productivity, and that openness can be a driver of diversification. A corollary is that government can play a supportive role in this process, and that critical to the process’ success is for policy-induced price incentives and other policies to point in a coherent direction in support of the diversification process. 1 The above notwithstanding, one of the messages of this report is also that Botswana's exports are highly focused on the South African market. Clearly, expansion of Botswana's exports will also need to eventually consider expanding markets beyond South Africa to the rest of the region. 5 Implementing only a small part of a coherent program is likely to bear only small fruit. That is because there is no single policy lever that, if pulled, will magically propel diversification. To be sure, some policies are arguably more important that others – removing telecommunications cost disadvantages, realigning industrial policies, and reducing costs and improving service in air transport are among them. However, enacting even these measures will not realize Botswana’s full potential and will have a much lower pay-off than would predictably result from the synergies actions in all areas. For example, liberalizing air transport and improving tourism management simultaneously produce a bigger “bang for the buck� than implementing only one or the other. This underscores the importance of sustained leadership from the entire economic cabinet, working closely with the Botswana private sector, to orchestrate this transformation. On its success hinges the living standards of the next generation of Batswana. 6 The Agenda: Align incentives, reduce services costs, and vigorously promote exports Because of its natural endowments and relatively weak private sector outside of mining, the Botswana government has to play a more vigorous role than in other middle-income countries. But this role has to be fundamentally different than in the past. Rather than trying to create domestic industry by attempting to shield it from competition, the government has to focus its efforts on (a) designing incentives that use price signals and competition to encourage exports, (b) reducing the costs of services inputs into Botswana industry by using the regulatory power of the state to– either by widening the scope of competition in services or deploying its direct regulatory power; and (c) promoting exports of both goods and services with pro-active policies that assist the private sector in identifying markets, developing latent export potential with advice and carefully targeted subsidies, and providing the necessary infrastructure and access to factors of production (such as land). This report provides deeper diagnosis and policy options in all three areas –aligning incentives, lowering costs of services inputs, and promoting exports -- in remaining chapters. For example: • The government spends some 3 percent of GDP to subsidize industrial development (see Chapter 2, Table 9, for a summary of the estimated cost of subsidies) – but half or more of these funds go to declining or import-substitution sectors rather than toward developing dynamic, modern export sectors, and most programs contravene the basic principles of effective industrial policy, lacking transparency, monitorable indicators of success, and sunset clauses. • Unilateral protection in dairy and poultry has taxed consumers for decades and forecloses export options in neighboring markets. • SACU tariff policy, where Botswana could have greater voice if it were to invest in technical capacity and data, systematically raises the cost of inputs into Botswana’s manufacturing sector by an estimated 10 percent, weighing down the country’s productivity and competitiveness in foreign markets; the trade regime is heavily biased against exports; for some 30 percent of their consumer goods, Botswana consumers pay a mark-up associated with a 40 percent tariff; the trade regime effectively taxes Botswana producers and consumers to support less- than- internationally- competitive businesses in South Africa. • Parastatals in beef, telecommunication, air transport and development banking absorb resources, drive up the costs of network services, and drain competitiveness from agriculture, manufacturing and service sectors, tourism, and the economy as whole. For example, Botswana pays a mark-up on its access to the fiber optic cable that penalizes its consumers, and then compounds this with an excessive regulatory fee to finance the regulator. • Regulation in trucking services, professional services, and administration of visas and work deprives Botswana of low transportation costs and access to skills it needs to develop its export potential. Cabotage transit rules, lack of VAT harmonization within SACU as well as its administration at the border, and trucking standards raise the cost of Botswana exports and imports. • Export promotion efforts in Botswana are dispersed across a wide array of agencies, and BEDIA, despite recent progress, is unable to coordinate export promotion and development activities. Only recently has it been given a mandate to include services exports, arguably the most dynamic export sector. 7 In each of these areas, the report suggests policy options to help advance Botswana’s competitiveness and diversification agenda. At the most general level this report focuses on the following major challenges: • Adopting industrial policies that create incentives for exports and efficient imports. The analysis in Chapter 2 suggests that industrial policies by and large are not fully aligned with competitiveness objectives, but rather are dispersed across programs to support import-substitution industries and declining activities rather than dynamic export industries. • Adopting trade policies that use price signals to create incentives to produce for export. The analysis in Chapter 3 illustrates how SACU trade policies and Botswana-enacted unilateral non-tariff barriers as well as services trade restrictions interact to create a substantial anti-export bias, undercutting Botswana’s competitiveness. • Adopting policies to reduce high costs of trading and of key backbone services. Chapter 4 shows that state monopolies, regulatory restrictions, and state institutions drive up the costs of telecommunications and air transport. • Promoting new investments to create new dynamism in traditional sectors. Chapter 5 points out the decline beef sector could be at least partially reversed through new programs and restructuring the BMC. It also discusses ways to reverse lost policy momentum in tourism and realize sustained growth in Botswana’s tourism industry. • Reinvigorating efforts at export and investment promotion. Chapter 6 elaborates on the positive role the government can play in export promotion and the investment program, and makes suggestions about ways the government can enhance BEDIA’s role in these areas. The next sections elaborate on these themes. The Executive Summary concludes with a matrix summarizing key policy reforms in support of Botswana’s competitiveness and diversification agenda. Industrial policies for competitiveness and diversification Industrial policy refers to the array of subsidies, tax expenditures, and other policies that constitute the incentives for private firms to engage in new productive activities. The major incentives in Botswana are subsidies to parastatals, to agriculture, and to investment promotion. Botswana spends three percent of its GDP on such policies. This amounts to about 7.5 percent of government spending, more than total public spending on health (which represented 6.6 percent of central government spending in 2011/12).2 This figure reflects only the actual or imputed costs to government. There are significant additional costs to the economy, including the costs of inefficient regulation in foregone growth and jobs. In addition, Botswana implements a number of trade restrictions whose costs are high and largely borne by Batswana consumers. Parastatal subsidies have kept the cost of some utilities, in particular electricity and water, below economic costs. This may well be justified as a support to Botswana businesses competing with firms, e.g. South African firms, whose electricity tariffs are subsidized.3 The BPC subsidies as currently structured, however, make it more difficult for private sector firms to move into power 2 These are estimates of expenditures by the Ministry of Health and the National AIDS Coordinating Agency (NACA) in 2011/12. 3 However, with substantial increases in electricity tariffs in South Africa in recent years, the differences with Botswana tariffs have diminished and nearly disappeared. Average tariffs in South Africa are projected to reach US¢ 7.7 per kWh in 2012/13, compared to about US¢ 7.6 per kWh in Botswana today. 8 generation. An immediate priority would therefore be to examine whether these large subsidies to the power sector actually promote diversification and competitiveness – and if so whether they could be structured in such a way as to encourage rather than hinder private investment in the power sector. More importantly, subsidies to parastatals do not always keep the price of key inputs low. They often entrench inefficiency, placing a drag on productivity and on export industries. A clear example is Air Botswana, where high subsidies, combined with restrictions on market entry, have limited the supply of air travel services and enabled the company to maintain high prices. This is a major disincentive to investment in the tourism sector and elsewhere. Subsidies to the Botswana Meat Commission have had a similar effect on beef exports. The two major agricultural subsidies in place in Botswana are the provision of veterinary services to cattle farmers (and indirectly to beef industry) by the Department of Veterinary Services (DVS) and the ISPAAD program which subsidizes arable farming. Veterinary services to enable producers to meet the EU’s sanitary and phytosanitary standards (SPS) account for the majority of DVS costs. Despite these expenditures, Botswana lost access to the EU beef market in January 2011 due to a failure to meet SPS standards. Whether the benefits to Botswana of higher EU prices exceed the costs of compliance measures has never been subject to a thorough evaluation. Regarding ISPAAD, the subsidy cost of BWP 230 million a year compares with total value added in the crop sector of BWP150 million in 2010. ISPAAD has not succeeded in lifting crop yields to anywhere near commercial viability, and has been ineffective at raising the living standards of the rural poor. Half the beneficiaries are in fact absentee urban residents. Tax expenditures (i.e. reductions) are another incentive employed in Botswana’s industrial policy. The costs of tax expenditures are low (the loss from the concessional rate on manufacturing is about two percent of non-mining corporate income tax), but the benefits are low as well. Manufacturing tax concessions have not had a noticeable impact on the growth of the manufacturing sector, whose share in GDP has fallen from 5 percent in mid-1990s to under 4 percent in 2010. More important from a competitiveness perspective, a considerable portion of these tax concessions supports declining sectors rather than new dynamic industries. Even in the case of the IFSC, where tax concessions have been successful at attracting companies to Botswana, given the small size and slow growth of the IFSC, the incentive cannot be regarded as particularly successful. Within SACU, Botswana has introduced a number of restrictions on trade to protect specific industries (such as poultry and UHT milk). The contradictions entailed in this policy are starkly illustrated in the case of poultry. Import restrictions have been in place for 31 years and have supported the emergence of a domestic poultry industry that has made the country largely self- sufficient, and has created about 4,500 jobs. However, the price of poultry is 35 percent above the price in South Africa, representing a substantial loss of consumer surplus (estimated at P500 million, or around 0.5% of GDP) and a very high cost per job created (around BWP 125,000).4 Although some producers have been exploring the potential for exporting to the EU under the EPA agreement, the EU would not grant duty-free entry with these import restrictions in place. Similarly, infant industry protection for UHT milk has stimulated the establishment of a local industry and job creation, but with a very high cost per job created. Trade protection comes at the cost of higher prices to consumers (and as with poultry, this mostly impacts on lower-income groups), and with little or no export potential while protection continues. The protected industries are unlikely to be competitive with imports once protection is removed. Such measures are not 4 Grynberg, 2011 9 subjected to thorough assessments, and what assessments take place pay little attention to the interests of consumers or the impact on competitiveness. In sum, Botswana’s current industrial policies do not adequately reflect competitiveness and diversification objectives. A clear sectoral bias results from the structure of tax concessions and direct and indirect subsidies, which generally favors declining activities over emerging ones, import-substitution over exports, and manufacturing and agriculture over services. The results have been disappointing. Manufacturing and agriculture have stagnated, and indeed have shrunk as a portion of GDP, and there is no evidence that favored sub-sectors, such as textiles and garments and crop farming and cattle rearing have grown more rapidly as a result of concessions; in fact they continue to struggle. Beyond their impact on competitiveness and diversification, the costs of these incentives and subsidies are very significant. In an environment where the overall level of government spending has to be reduced to achieve sustainability as mineral revenues decline, all areas of government spending need to be critically examined in order to determine where spending could be reduced. There is therefore a critical need for evidence-based policy evaluation of all programs, incentives and subsidies. This in turn requires appropriate quality data, which is often unavailable or difficult to access. These are essential elements of well-designed industrial policies. Transparency, providing subsidies only to new activities, and having clear criteria for success as well as sunset clauses on subsidy and incentive programs are other important guidelines. The Trade Regime and Disincentives to Export Much like industrial policies, most governments use border barriers to tilt the playing field in favor of some activities, using the price system to channel private investment into particular areas. However, favoring some activities comes at the expense of others, so while industrial policy through subsidies and tax expenditures is paid for by taxpayers, tariff policy comes at the expense of raising prices to consumers and non-beneficiary industries – and reducing their competitiveness. Trade policy therefore needs to be carefully evaluated for its impact on domestic firms and their ability to grow and compete. Botswana’s trade policy has four dimensions that affect its export diversification potential: SACU tariffs that convey price signals to its producers; Botswana’s own unilateral policies at the border through nontariff measures; unilateral and regional policy toward services; and regional initiatives to increase market access abroad. In Botswana, the trade policy regime is stacked against export diversification. The SACU tariff schedule, and in particular the high tariffs on intermediate inputs, discourages exports and encourages production for the local market instead. The bias in favor of selling manufactures of final goods in the domestic market amounts to a 46 percent premium relative to selling in foreign markets. Firms in Botswana are disadvantaged by having to purchase inputs from the region at prices inflated by the value of the tariff. Manufacturing firms in Botswana source 85-90 percent of their imported inputs from South Africa. If these inputs were sourced from other countries, where the SACU MFN tariff applies, the average tariff on the import bundle would be 10.6 percent. Botswana firms are paying a premium on these imports, costs that put them at a disadvantage in global markets. Income losses for Botswana from the tariff schedule are offset by the favorable distribution of revenues from the SACU tariff pool, which find their way to private consumers in the form of public sector wages and to producers who sell to or receive 10 subsidies from government. Nevertheless, the overall effect is to undermine the long- term competitiveness of Botswana’s private productive sector. The most frequently cited rationale for these tariffs is jobs; this comes at a tremendous cost. It has been estimated that consumers in SACU, including in Botswana, pay US$280,000 per job created (Edwards and Lawrence, 2008). Within SACU, Botswana’s use of unilateral border protection, mainly for agriculture, has failed to spur diversification – in fact it has mired activities in the domestic market that might otherwise become export industries. Similarly, unilateral policies toward services has generally prevented for Botswana from harnessing competition from regional or international companies to drive domestic productivity gains – rather with the consequence of protecting established monopolies in professional services, air transport, and telecommunication. While Botswana is relatively open in retail banking and retail trade, it is much more restrictive in professional services (notably accountancy and legal services), transportation and telecommunications. These restrictions contribute to scarcity that raises the costs of providing key services: skills premia for accountants, on a PPP-adjusted basis, was higher in both Botswana than in the US or Germany; engineers enjoy a skill premium second only to the United States. In addition to generating political pressure to maintain the restrictions, these higher costs undermine the competitiveness of Botswana enterprises. To make matters works, while these conditions imply high pay-offs to employing foreign professionals, obtaining work visas and permits can take up to six months rather than the target time of two weeks. By and large market access associated with high border barriers does not appear to be a problem limiting Botswana’s export diversification. Nevertheless, a number of important issues affecting Botswana’s access to countries in the region remain, and are best addressed through regional trade platforms in SACU, SADC, and COMESA. These include: reducing inefficiencies in transport, customs and logistics; harmonizing fiscal arrangements to reduce the need for border checks; removing restrictive rules of origin that limit the benefits or preferential trade; consider eliminating other NTBs that restrict opportunities for regional sourcing, including trade permits, exports taxes, import licenses and bans; harmonizing standards; and promoting the mutual recognition of professional qualifications. Of all regions in the world, Southern Africa has the lowest indices of intra-industry trade; in other words, there are virtually no supply chains that connect countries in the region. Removing the restrictions that impede trade within the region is a key step in beginning to address this state of affairs. Even though Botswana does not unilaterally control its trade policy because of its membership in SACU and SADC, the government can take steps that will over the long run markedly shift incentives in favor of greater competitiveness. Creating capacity within government to advocate effectively for trade policies in the country’s interest is essential. Equally important is the discipline of conducting a full evaluation of the costs and benefits of any new proposed trade measures. Continuing to improve cumbersome customs procedures, revamping import and export licensing, quota arrangements and import prohibitions, and reviewing the need for import permits with a view to removing this requirement for all but a limited number of commodities would ease the cost and time burden on exporting firms. A review of services restrictions with a view to greater liberalization to spur competition, lower costs and increase exports is also needed. Reducing the Cost of Backbone Services An essential, commonly-found, ingredient for a successful diversification strategy is the reduction of the costs of production in the new traded sectors to help to spur efficiency and encourage entry. 11 Telecommunications, air transport and trucking are key services sectors that, while they may represent growth sectors in their own right, also constitute important inputs into the production of other traded goods and services. Yet in Botswana state monopolies and regulatory restrictions have driven up the costs of these services. Botswana needs to compensate for being landlocked with world-class telecommunications service and infrastructure, and air transport and trucking services. The ICT Sector. Unfortunately, whereas it was once considered a star ICT performer among developing countries, today sector reform is incomplete and Botswana is falling behind other countries in terms of growth rate, prices and the contribution of ICTs as a driver of innovation. The price and quality of internet service is uncompetitive and uptake extremely low. High prices are in part to blame for this decline, with the high cost of ICT in Botswana being most pronounced for broadband Internet. Today, Botswana’s ICT infrastructure and services are not sufficient for applications that would require a high bandwidth for data transfer and costs are high, hobbling the country’s efforts to compete and diversify. The challenge is to create an open and competitive, market-based infrastructure, with prices low enough for experimentation, innovation and broad access. Even as international connectivity has improved with the arrival of the EASSy and WACS submarine cables, progress on introducing competition in ICT in Botswana has lagged, and policy bottlenecks remain. The underlying reason for Botswana’s disappointing ICT performance is the misplaced protectionism of the fixed-line incumbent operator, the Botswana Telecommunications Corporation (BTC), which has hampered competitive behavior in the Internet segment of the market. To resolve this, privatization alone may not be sufficient. Reform will need to ensure competition across all segments of the business: in international connectivity, regional connectivity, switching/routing, xDSL/cable networks, and retail services as well as the domestic backbone. Key to ensuring competition is liberalizing the local loop to promote competition among operators, and encouraging infrastructure competition in the domestic backbone through providing easy access rights of way. Air Transport. Minimal competition, poor connectivity and high fares characterize air transport in Botswana. The state-owned entity, Air Botswana, is the only carrier permitted to operate scheduled domestic services in the country, and there is very little competition on international routes. Policy-induced limitations are exacerbated by the small volume of air transport in Botswana, with fewer than 790,000 passengers in 2011. Tourism, financial and professional services, the newly expanded diamond trading activities and other economic sectors that depend on reliable and affordable air transport services are hurt by the current state of the sector. Efforts to further liberalize the air transport sector are essential if the air transport sector is to make a meaningful contribution to competitiveness and diversification in Botswana; Botswana should consider the granting of 5th freedom rights as part of its bilateral agreement with other countries; this would encourage the establishment of foreign carriers of long-haul connections between Botswana and foreign destinations. Domestically, opening up cabotage to “on demand� (say charter) services is an option to stimulate competition. Establishing a clear framework for regulatory oversight of airport and air navigation services is a necessity, by clearly separating the Civil Aviation Authority of Botswana’s (CAAB) role as regulator of the sector from its role as a service provider. Finally, commercial considerations should play an important role in determining the viability and continued sustainability of the operations of Air Botswana. Although Air Botswana’s mandate extends beyond maintaining commercial operations to linking 12 rural communities, its de facto monopoly over the scheduled segment of the domestic market has not served the economy very well. Creating New Dynamism in Traditional Sectors Beyond mining, Botswana has enjoyed important export success in the beef and tourism sector. Yet in both areas, Botswana has lost policy momentum and neither sector is contributing up to its potential towards Botswana’s efforts to compete and diversity. The beef and livestock sector is in crisis, and unless determined action to reverse the slide is taken, the continuation of beef exports may well cease in a decade or so. The growth of tourism has also declined, and Botswana is even losing shares in the SADC market. Dispelling the complacency that appears to have descended on the sector is critical to realizing sustained growth in Botswana’s tourism industry. The cattle and beef sector plays an important role in Botswana’s economy and society. While its contribution to GDP has declined over the years and is small today, it is important as an export and for rural employment and livelihoods. It is a sector, however, which has become less competitive over time, with declining exports and rising costs, and which is not living up to its potential as a source of growth and economic and trade diversification in Botswana. The latest blow has been Botswana’s loss of access to its largest and most remunerative market. This is a manifestation of a number serious challenges affecting the sector, including declining production and yields, a poor incentive structure partly due to lack of export competition and a monopoly structure, the high cost structure at the Botswana Meat Commission (BMC), and large, ineffective, inefficient and poorly targeted government subsidies. While external constraints such as drought and disease have impacted the sector, many of the problems are policy failures. First, improved productivity of both commercial and communal cattle-raising is necessary. A major long-term problem facing the cattle and beef sector is the declining standards of technical cattle productivity, leaving ever lower beef surpluses for export. For improved productivity, management levels will have to increase drastically. One option to increase the management levels is to organize the farmers into associations with common management, training and extension and joint purchase of services, goods and joint marketing so as to develop economies of scale. Second, lifting the ban on non-BMC beef and live cattle exports is essential to the viability of the sector. Farmers are poorly served by the current system where they only have access to the BMC and local butcheries to the exclusion of more profitable export markets such as South Africa and others. Without the liberalization of non-EU exports, there would be few pressures on the BMC to offer producers real export parity prices, or to rationalize its costs. Third, to enhance profitability and allow BMC to live up to its core objective – maximizing revenues for livestock producers – the overhead costs of slaughter and processing will have to be reduced drastically. Reducing the number of cattle slaughterhouses from three to two would go a long way to achieving this. More broadly, the BMC should be restructured into a federation of local and specialized cooperatives, whose main objective is to maximize farmer incomes. Fourth, addressing the rising maintenance cost to the national budget of the license to export beef has become a priority, one that can be resolved by initiating a system of cost recovery. The elimination of subsidies to the production of food grains is an element of this, as is shifting to farmers those costs that are private in nature, including some veterinary services. Finally, diversification of exports to new markets seems inevitable for the viability of the beef and cattle sector whether or not Botswana pursues renewed access to the EU beef market. A quick, accurate study is needed to compare Botswana’s costs of compliance with EU regulations against incremental revenues due to EU access, and then a time limit should be set for regaining access to 13 the EU. If justified by the study, the heavy public sector costs of measures put in place to ensure EU compliance would need to be curtailed, and export focus shifted to other markets. And being a high cost producer, Botswana needs to work towards branding its product and ensuring access to high price niche markets. Tourism is one of the few non-mining sectors in Botswana that has grown faster than overall GDP over the past decade, and is a major contributor to the economy, both in terms of the jobs it creates (18,500 direct jobs and 45,000 jobs that are indirectly supported by the sector) as well as the export revenues it generates. Yet it is showing signs of sluggishness, with average growth of only 1.3 percent over the past five years. Botswana is losing market share to competitors within SADC, and has declined in the ranking of the World Economic Forum’s (WEF) Travel & Tourism (T&T) Competitiveness Index (TTCI), dropping 12 slots to 91 (of 139 countries) between 2010 and 2011. Poor growth in the sector is largely attributable to a failure to diversity Botswana’s tourism offerings and in particular to attract more foreign independent tourists (FIT), a fast-growing segment fuelling much of the tourism growth in SADC. The absence of an approved policy framework for development of the sector is another problem. Opportunities for investment have been hindered by difficulties in access to land, which is a particular constrain for new entrants into the industry. Moreover, the Botswana tourism brand is not well defined, and the perception remains that Botswana is a low volume, high value destination, a perception at odds with the FIT market that is driving much of the growth in the region. Skills and knowledge gaps also hamper industry growth, and are exacerbated – as in other sectors – by the difficulty of hiring foreign labor. This represents a major challenge for businesses struggling to maintain high quality standards critical for success in a highly competitive industry. Beyond strengthening sector institutions, skills and infrastructure, reforms in a number of supporting sectors – including air transport and ICT are needed if tourism is to attain its potential and play a more vital role in Botswana’s diversification efforts. Promoting Exports to Spur Diversification For a middle income country, Botswana’s export pattern is unusual: comparatively few firms export (10 percent of the total), these exports reach only a relatively few markets (Botswana sells in only 2 percent of markets that import its products) and the survival rate of new exports in foreign markets is on average unusually low (only 40 percent survive into a second year). Improving these statistics fall in large measure on the shoulders of the export promotion agencies. Export promotion agencies confront several challenges. Coordinating the dozen or so agencies whose mandate is, directly or indirectly, related to export diversification, is one. A second challenge is establishing the right balance of public interventions moving through the export chain – from supporting firms in the export readiness phase, through market penetration, to survival and growth. A small domestic market makes it particularly difficult to nurture firms until they become regionally or globally competitive, and as a result firms frequently begin exporting before they are ready to compete effectively. A third and fourth set of challenges concern trade financing, which is an issue frequently overlooked by Botswana’s trade support institutions, and the revamping of the logistics networks which make it difficult for Botswana firms to compete with other countries on price and reliability. The result has been that efficiency of export promotion spending – the amount of non-mineral exports per pula of export promotion expenditure – in Botswana is low relative to comparators. SEZs may contribute to solutions in 14 the long-term, but are not a panacea. Rather, policy adjustments and institutional reforms in all of these dimensions can raise the productivity of public investments in export promotion, and be requited with greater productivity gains for the economy.5 To improve the effectiveness of export promotion, a number of policy options may be considered. Supporting the strategic shift of BEDIA (BITC) to new sectors beyond manufacturing, specifically embracing services and agriculture is one. Hand-in-hand with this, upgrading technical capacity in export promotion and business support agencies to deliver on the new mandate would be required, particularly in terms of the industry expertise of staff. Scaling up the Export Enterprise Development Program (EDP) to provide greater support to incipient exporters in necessary if the program is to have any measurable impact on exports. Improving coordination among agencies to reduce overlap and facilitate the movement of firms into exporting has already been mentioned; expanding monitoring and evaluation of the impact and efficiency of export promotion initiatives is essential if there is to be improved learning and targeting of resources. Finally, in order to realize the potential of SEZs, a clear, concrete and operational definition of the strategic objectives and economic advantages to be realized with SEZs must be agreed on. Also important for SEZ success is to clarify the nature of BEDIA’s (BITC’s) interim authority to design strategy and propose policy is essential; at present, BEDIA (BITC) lacks the authority, resources and capacity to support the SEZ program. As most zones take several years to develop and 5-10 more years to begin to grow, moving forward with all deliberate haste is advisable. The policy recommendations put forward in this report are summarized in the Policy Matrix below, and organized along thematic lines: 1) Creating Comparative Advantage Through Industrial Policy; 2) Creating New Incentives for Trade Growth: Trade Policy and Trading Across Borders; 3) Enhancing Competitiveness of Services: Lowering Costs of Infrastructure and Increasing Exports; 4) Raising Productivity of Existing Exports of Goods and Services; 5) Promoting Exports to Spur Diversification. A number of cross-cutting reforms, essential to a broad range of sectors and activities, are highlighted. Some recommendations are new, and many are not, and can be found in the existing strategies, studies or programs, but have not been implemented. The Policy Matrix indicates whether a recommendation is already found in one of the following documents: the BIDPA/World Bank 2005 report, BES (2008) and EDD (2011), or is new in this report. 5 If the entire country could establish a highly competitive environment (in terms of infrastructure, investment climate, trade policies and so on) there would be little need for an SEZ. There are typically reasons, however, why delivering such an environment on a country-wide basis may be difficult to achieve, including infrastructure investment costs, capacity to deliver (e.g. on the investment climate or on services for investors), and political economy considerations that may make it more acceptable to introduce reforms (at least initially) in a defined spatial environment. From the standpoint of attracting investment, there may also be marketing or promotional benefits of establishing a specific SEZ. In general, however, the policy reforms required for the SEZ should be best delivered on a national basis. The main argument for establishing a SEZ in Botswana would be linked to infrastructural investments, particularly in sectors that may require heavy use of broadband or other ICT infrastructure. 15 Policy Recommendations: An Agenda for Competitiveness and Diversification New or Existing CROSS CUTTING REFORMS • Introduce impact assessment of economic programs before approving them and monitoring and evaluation of the New programs after approval • Establish customer service standards for making decisions on work permits/visa applications with a view toward New granting visas within a specified number of days/hours, according to established international best practice, after which grant automatically Existing (BIDPA/WB • Expedite reforms to land allocation and zoning to improve availability of land and facilitate investment Study) Existing (BIDPA/WB • Improve the capacity to gather and analyze economic data in order to support evidence-based policy making Study) 1 Creating Comparative Advantage through Industrial Policy Existing (BIDPA/WB • Phase down programs that subsidize import-substitution activities and shift resources to programs that support exports Study) • Revamp EDD and introduce proper monitoring of costs and impact on firms (tracer studies), and introduce a time limit on Existing (BIDPA/WB preferences Study) • Review ISPAAD to determine economic costs vs benefits and avoid providing incentives to inefficient activities with limited Existing (BIDPA/WB long-term potential. Study) Existing (BIDPA/WB • • Consider adopting a uniform 15% (or revenue neutral) tax rate for all business activities except mining and banking. Study) • Introduce impact assessment of economic programs before approving them and monitoring and evaluation of the programs after New approval. • Set up an inter-ministerial committee to review regulations that affect competitiveness with the objective of removing inefficient regulations, reviewing new regulations for their effect on competitiveness, and meeting OECD standards of good regulatory Existing (EDD) practice. • Establish an independent appeal mechanism to review complaints of the private sector regarding decisions of civil servants, and New make recommendations to the economic cabinet. Creating new incentives for trade growth: Trade policy and trade across borders 2 2.1 General policy making: • Create capacity within Ministry of Trade and Industry, by strengthening data and technical skills, to advocate New effectively for trade policies in Botswana’s interest. 2.2 Tariff policy - SACU: • SACU: Advocate for (a) reductions in the common external MFN tariff, especially those most prejudicial Botswana Existing (BIDPA/WB producers, including tariff peaks and tariffs on intermediate inputs; (b) a simplified tariff system with only 3-6 low-rate Study) bands 2.3 NTBs: • Unilateral: Remove core NTBs; continue to improve existing cumbersome customs procedures; and revamp import and Existing (BES) export licensing, quota arrangements, and unnecessary import prohibitions • Adopt a phased program to remove the bans on poultry, eggs, beef, imported bread, flour and sugar as well as seasonal bans on Existing (BIDPA/WB horticultural products. Study) • Undertake a detailed review of all import permits, with a view to removing this requirement for all but a limited number of Existing (BIDPA/WB commodities for security, public health and public morality reasons. Government could review the Control of Goods, Services Study) and Other Charges Act, possibly applying a costs and benefits approach to assess whether a reduced scope for the Act is beneficial. • Unilateral: Adapt SADC Trade Protocol to create annual audit and publication of trade-restricting NTBs that serve no New purpose than to block competition. • Simplify Business Licensing Procedures, including the abolishing of trade and industrial licensing requirements except Existing (BES) where clear public interest benefits apply. 2.4 Rules of origin - SACU: • Allow exporters to choose between either a change of tariff heading or low value added content rule. New • Eliminate all product- and process-specific rules of origin, and remove requirements for certification of products with preference New margins of less than 3%. 17 2.5 • Services trade: • Unilateral: Review services restrictions with view to reductions to spur competition. New Existing (BIDPA/WB • Harmonize standards and adopt mutual/regional recognition (e.g. approval of seeds, licensing of chemicals and pharmaceuticals) Study) New • Aggressively pursue services liberalization with the EU and SADC partners through trade negotiations, with the aim of establishing Botswana as a base for provision of niche services the region 3 Enhancing Competitiveness of Services: Lowering Costs of Infrastructure and Increasing Exports 3.1 Lowering input costs -Telecommunications: Competition: • Liberalize (unbundle) the local loop and open access to the fiber backbone to encourage competition. Existing (BIDPA/WB Study) • Continue diversifying international connectivity New • Use price regulation where appropriate, based on international benchmarking and cost modeling New • Negotiate a virtual coastline with neighbors (use SADC and CRASA) New Privatisation: • Move forward reliably and quickly with BTC privatization. Consider functional - instead of physical - separation of Existing (BIDPA/WB BTC's network and service divisions. Study) Regulation: • Build capacity within the regulator (including a potential international exchange program) New • Explore scope for market-leading price regulation New Miscellaneous: • Develop a collaborative national broadband strategy that aims to reduce price, improve speed and reliability, enhance New consumer choice, and develop new applications • Gather reliable price/access/usage data New • Raise awareness and usage via mobile money, eGovernment and eCommerce Existing (EDD) 3.2 Land transport and trade facilitation: 18 • Accelerate implementation of key transport infrastructure projects, including the Kazungula Bridge and Walvis Dryport • Apply risk-based systems for border clearances, including an accredited transporter scheme • Push to finalize agreements on regional standards, including load limits, vehicle dimensions and establishing a regional third party insurance system • Establish a SADC consultation mechanism for VAT and custom rebate arrangements • Harmonize load limits and other transport restriction with the rest of SADC (i.e GVM requirements, weighbridge calibration, driving hour restrictions etc).. • Remove cabotage restrictions on national and regional trucking • Improve road user charge (RUC) tariff policy. • Establish an accredited transport services provider system in SADC. • Strengthen local capacity by bringing in foreign skills to fill the skills and capacity gap (warehousing, distribution, logistics and trucking). Restrictions on visa/work permits should be relaxed. 3.3 Air transport services: • Reduce protection of Air Botswana by opening up domestic and international market to new entrants and wind down New existing subsidies. • Improve CAAB’s capacity to meet ICAO Standards and Recommended Practices in terms of regulatory oversight. New Existing (BIDPA/WB • Promote long-haul traffic by offering “Open Skies� to long-haul carriers. Study and BES) • Assess the long-term potential for developing SSKIA in Gaborone into a regional hub. Existing (BES) 3.4 Professional Services: • Carry out, on a regular basis, an inventory of scarce skills in the country to guide training needs and immigration Existing (EDD) policies. • Promote access to skills and enlarge the scope for cross-border supply of professional services by reducing restrictions Existing (BIDPA/WB on access to temporary and extended stay professional inherent in visa requirements, based upon transparent Study) application of liberalized economic needs texts or development of a points-based system. • Establish customer service standards for making decisions on work permits/visa applications with a view toward granting visas New within a specified number of days/hours, according to established international best practice, after which grant automatically. • Establish procedures for recognizing professional qualifications certified in other countries. 19 • Reduce entry restrictions on establishment of foreign firms in legal practice, accounting, and engineering to the same as for New domestic firms. New 4 Raising productivity of existing exports of goods and services (Finance, Tourism and Livestock) 4.1 Tourism: Coordination: • Update and approve National Tourism Policy enabling sector focus and ability to follow specific strategies New • Conduct review and adopt best practices to enable flexibility in land zoning and tourism licensing Existing (BES) • Government to explore the scope for the introduction of a single, special tourist visa that could be approved and, purchased in advance Existing (BIDPA/WB of the visit at a foreign office of any of the four tourism circuit countries (Botswana, Namibia, Zambia and Zimbabwe) Study) • Create apex committee to coordinate tourism policy across ministries New • Enable streamlined tourist and work visa regime; and pursue the idea of common regional visa New • Create one stop shop for tourism investors with cooperation from Ministry of Lands and Housing New Product Diversification: • Diversify product offerings to target growing market segments (including foreign independent tourists) and develop niche New products (such as sport tourism, birding, and culture tourism etc) • Address skill deficit of local workforce through creating hotel/lodge based training centers of excellence (to ensure locals can Existing (BES) fill roles such as chefs, lodge managers, wilderness guides, etc) • Revitalize Land Bank Initiative improving land availability and attract increased investment New • Support community-based initiatives to increase employment, diversify products and improve internal image for tourism New Marketing: Existing (BIDPA/WB • Establish public/private collaboration for effective marketing and promotion of the country Study) • Align branding and marketing to target niche segments New 4.2 Livestock: • If justified by an analytical study, the BMC beef export monopoly should be removed due to its high costs, along with all the New expenditure programs (including those of DVS) aimed at retaining the EU market. The export focus should shift to domestic and neighboring country markets. • Promote formation of active cattle cooperatives at each large cattle post/tubewell/rural settlement, with a professional livestock New specialist employed to lead the farmers into more productive and profitable management approaches. • Reduce costs and remove subsidies of the BMC and DVS programs by selling under-utilized slaughterhouses, ending promotion of New grain production, reducing workforce, and introducing flexible work rules. 20 • Privatize veterinary services except for contagious diseases and retail sales of agricultural inputs. New 5. Promoting Exports to Spur Diversification 5.1 Export promotion New • Shift strategic focus of BEDIA to new sectors, beyond manufacturing, to include services and agriculture. New • Scale up the Export Development Program to provide greater support to improving competitiveness for incipient exporters. • Improve coordination among export promotion and business development support institutions to reduce overlap and facilitate Existing (EDD) movement of firms into exporting. Specific actions include establishing a clear MOU between LEA and BEDIA, coordinating firm audits, and using common CRM systems. • Expand efforts to monitor and evaluate the efficiency and impact of export promotion and (more broadly) industrial policy New initiatives; put specific capacity and resources into BEDIA for this. • Adopt a matching grants program to better leverage the private business development services market, in order to more Existing (EDD) effectively scale export promotion support and align incentives of firms. • Upgrade technical capacity in export promotion and business support agencies, specifically focusing on: i) having industry- New specific expertise in key sectors; and ii) having expertise in monitoring & evaluation. • Expedite reforms to land allocation issue Existing (BES) • Establish an independent appeal mechanism to review complaints of the private sector regarding decisions of civil servants, and make recommendations to the economic cabinet. 5.2 • Special Economic Zones (SEZs) • Accelerate decision-making on the SEZ program, specifically conducting a (pre-) feasibility study to identify the clear Existing (EDD) commercial case for SEZs, from which the business and institutional model and key decisions on the tax regime and regulations, will derive. • Approach SEZs as pilots to test reforms to key investment climate/export constraints. New • Avoid using SEZs as a regional development policy tool. Focus on making one successful zone in the medium term. New 21 Chapter 1: From Diamonds to New Sources of Growth, New Exports, New Markets Declining Growth Momentum Botswana, after a remarkable thirty year period of rapid expansion, has been losing growth momentum (Figure 1). This is to be expected to a certain extent, as the economy expands in size (a denominator effect) and as the returns to investments naturally diminish as later investments are less productive relative to the early investments in human and physical capital in the 1970s and 1980s. Botswana’s rapid growth during this period was largely the result of high investment in both human and physical capital, much of it financed by government from diamond revenues. In addition to a rapid accumulation of human and physical capital, increases in productivity made a significant contribution to economic growth in the 1970s and 1980s. Total factor productivity (TFP) calculations, although beset by data as well as conceptual difficulties, indicate that between 1975 and 1990, TFP growth was positive and high, particularly in the early years.6,7 Since 1990, however, TFP growth has been negative.8 There appears to have been a shift from high payoffs to infrastructure and human capital investment in the first decades following the discovery of diamonds, to declining productivity of these investments over the past twenty years (Leith, 1997 and 2005; World Bank, 2005). 25% 20% 8000 7000 15% 6000 10% 5000 Pula 4000 % 5% 3000 2000 0% 1000 -5% 0 1975/6 1977/8 1979/80 1981/2 1983/4 1985/6 1987/8 1989/0 1991/2 1993/4 1995/6 1997/8 1999/00 2001/2 2003/4 2005/6 2007/8 Figure 1: Real GDP growth, 1975-2008 Figure 2: Per capita mineral revenues Prospects for future growth are dimmed by the decline in per capita mineral revenues (Figure 2). Whether diamonds will be exhausted in the coming twenty or thirty years is uncertain. What seems likely, however, is that the diamond revenues accruing to government will decline due to increased costs of extraction. Indeed, while diamonds are still the mainstay of the economy, revenues have been declining for some time. So while the country’s stock of diamonds is not set to decline for another 10-15 years, the economic boom made possible by diamonds exports has slowed down significantly. It is very unlikely that diamond exports could grow in the future at a rate that would allow Botswana to maintain its historical rates of spending or growth. Botswana 6 For a critique of the Botswana TFP calculations, see Wright, 1999. 7 The early 1980s saw a large increase in the mineral sector’s capital stock, but demand for diamonds fell at just about the same time as a result of the 1981/2 global recession. The result was excess capacity and a drop in TFP in the early 80s which recovered later in the decade (Leith, 2005). 8 The Investment Climate Assessment found that TFP in Botswana’s manufacturing sector (i.e. private sector) was lower than in most comparator countries – SACU economies and Argentina, Chile, Malaysia and Mauritius – and less than 50 percent of TFP in South Africa (World Bank, 2005). can no longer rely solely on diamonds, and on the government spending it facilitates, for its growth and development and must venture into new activities to sustain growth. Failing Policy Momentum These are by no means new questions. Economic diversification has been at the center of the Government of Botswana’s policy framework for at least the past two decades. And as will be seen in the various chapters of this report, government has implemented numerous policies and programs to spur diversification into sectors beyond minerals. What is most worrisome, however, is that Botswana appears to be falling behind in policy as well as growth momentum. Where in earlier times it has often been seen as a regional leader in a number of areas, recently it has been slipping in ranking and has effectively fallen behind the pace of reform now set by others. Table 1 shows Botswana’s rankings according to various global indices over the past four years. For most indices, Botswana has been steadily declining in the rankings. GCI DB IEF CPI 2012 .. .. 54 33 2011 80 52 40 32 2010 76 50 28 33 2009 66 39 34 37 2008 56 51 36 36 Table 1: Declining Global Rankings Notes: GCI : Global Competitiveness Index (142); DB: Doing Business (183); IEF: Index of Economic Freedom (179); CPI: Corruption Perceptions Index (180) The dissipation of policy momentum is, as will be seen in the chapters to follow, not due to any lack of strategies or laws. Rather, it reflects the slow pace of reforms that improve the conditions faced by the private sector. As an illustration, in 2005 a joint BIDPA/World Bank report on Competitiveness put forward a set of 70 recommendations to strengthen competitiveness and the performance of the private sector. Many of these recommendations were incorporated into government strategies, including the Botswana Excellence Strategy and others. Seven years later, the vast majority of the recommendations have not been implemented (Table 2). While there may have clearly been disagreement with some of the recommendations and their advisability for Botswana, the extremely low implementation rate is telling. Fully/Largely Virtually no Policy Reversal Implemented Implementation Trade and 37% 58% 5% 41% Regional Policy Industrial Policy 0% 91% 9% 24% and Export Promotion Services 30% 70% 0% 22% Skills and FDI 33% 33% 33% 13% 26% 65% 9% 100% Table 2: Implementation of BIDPA 2005 Policy Recommendations 23 The Silver Lining While Botswana faces tough challenges going forward in its efforts to diversify its economy, it possesses some key elements of success. An important conclusion of analyses that have tried to understand what factors explain why some countries succeed diversification, while others fails, is that many of the policy and institutional factors that enable countries to manage resource wealth well are important for their ability to diversify into other sectors. And Botswana has managed its resource wealth better than most. For instance, Botswana’s ability to smooth the macroeconomic volatility associated with large export price swings will assist it in sustaining investment in the non-diamond trades sectors (Gelb, 2010). There is also a strong and systematic relationship between institutional quality (measured in various ways) and the ability to diversify. Again, Botswana is known for democratic institutions and low corruption. While these may not be the precise institutions needed for diversification, they should facilitate the building of other appropriate institutions in support of competitiveness and diversification. There is also broad agreement that most countries that have diversified successfully into new sectors have focused on broadening their range of exports. Trade Performance: Success… and Vulnerabilities The Good News Exports have powered growth for three decades Exports have been the motor of Botswana’s development for decades. Diamonds of course have been at the center of Botswana’s success. As a result, per capita incomes have risen at a pace that puts Botswana among the top 15 performers worldwide since 1980 – and effectively lifted average incomes out of the ranks of low-income countries into the global middle class. Exports of goods and services have grown pari passu with national income (Figure 3). Though with the global slowdown in 2001-03, trade lagged nominal GDP growth, it led growth until the onset of the Great Recession in late 2008. For at least the last three decades, on average, a one percent increase in the real growth rate of exports has translated into 0.2 percent increase in national income (Figure 4). By the end of the first decade of this century, the Botswana economy had attained a near-average level of openness – that is, trade to GDP -- among countries of its PPP income size (Figure 5). …and some diversification has occurred, mainly through services Though diamond exports were an obvious driver of export performance during this period, exports were becoming somewhat more diversified, particularly in 2000-10. Whereas diamonds out-performed all other exports by a ratio of more than 3:1 in 2000/01, by the end of the decade the value of other goods and services had risen to about half of diamond exports (Figure 5). To be sure, the Great Recession hit diamonds particularly hard in both price and volumes, and the new- found diversification within the portfolio has subsequently attenuated. But the export of services has been a major part of the Botswana’s export success. Since 1980, services have grown at about the same rate as merchandise exports –lagging somewhat during the 1990s but growing more rapidly after 1998, largely on the basis of increased tourism and later financial services. Services exports rose from about five percent of GDP in 1998 to 7 percent in 2008 before declining somewhat under the weight of the global recession. An important caveat about this trend is to underscore the absence of reliable data on services, so any conclusion about services is far from definitive. Non-diamond goods exports, however, performed much less well since the turn of the century – and have contributed little to the diversification effort. Though non-diamond exports have tripled since 2000/01, they slumped by the end of the decade (Figure 6). 24 Exports have grown in tandem with GDP A one percent increase in export growth is Real GDP and exports of goods and services—Index (1980=100) associated with a 0.2 percent increase in GDP 25 800% Real GDP Growth rate 700% 20 GDP 600% 500% 15 400% Exports of 10 300% goods and 200% services 5 100% 0 0% -40 -30 -20 -10 0 10 20 30 40 -5 Real growth of exports of goods and services Source: World Bank, World Development Indicators Source: World Bank, World Development Indicators Figure 3: Export growth and GDP Figure 4: Correlation between exports and growth Botswana displays average openness to trade …with some diversification, albeit slow Openess to trade 2006-2009 Nominal value of good exports Millions US$ 4,000 240 3,500 200 Diamonds 3,000 120 160 Trade to GDP 2,500 2,000 Other goods BWA 1,500 80 1,000 40 500 Service exports 0 6 7 8 9 10 11 0 ln GDP per capita PPP 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 Source: Authors calculation based on World Bank WDI database. Average 2006-2009 Source: Comtrade database and WDI database values. Figure 5: Openness to trade Figure 6: Slow diversification Botswana has managed resource earnings well Robust export performance since 1980 combined with good macroeconomic management translated diamond- driven growth into positive trade balances for every year but four, the years of severe world recession (1980-82 and 2009) (Figure 7). Throughout this period, Botswana accumulated foreign reserves, carefully avoided wide swings in the real exchange rate (particularly sudden appreciations), and maintain comparatively steady growth. Real exchange rate fluctuations have been limited to a relatively narrow range in the four decades. Using the method calculating real equilibrium exchanges rates using the method of de Melo and Ugarte (2011), the pula was overvalued about half of the period -- but by very small amounts (1.2 percentage points). The government’s solid macroeconomic management received help from the unusual global market power that DeBeers has historically had on diamonds. De Beers’ pricing, stockpile management and production policies helped cushion the wide swings in terms of trade that have plagued other natural resource producers. Botswana is in a class of its own in terms of having a high degree of concentration but relative low volatility of terms of trade (Figure 8). Avoiding wild swings in terms of trade common to commodity export dependent countries has meant that Botswana was also able to avoid the growth-depressing effects of terms of trade swings (see Lederman and Maloney, 2010; Jansen, 2004). In the future, with DeBeers’ shrinking world market share, macro management may become more complex. 25 Export growth produced positive trade Botswana has escaped the instability of other commodity balances exporters Trade balance nominal value, US$ m. 2,500 2,000 1,500 1,000 500 0 -500 -1,000 Source: World Bank, World Development Indicators Source: Lederman Maloney 2010 Figure 7: Positive trade balances Figure 8: Botswana’s low ToT volatility The Bad News: A more vulnerable future? Botswana’s export sector exhibits five symptoms of problems that, left unattended, could imperil future growth: • Declining per capita earnings from diamonds • Slow growth of non-mining exports of goods • Over-reliance on a narrow handful of non-diamond products and geographic markets • A non-mining export portfolio positioned in slow-growing products and slow growing markets • And a lack of staying power in markets – as new exports fail to gain foot hold in foreign markets Diamonds are not forever Botswana confronts one major problem: diamonds are not forever. Though the Debswana deposits are projected to last another 15 to 20 years (see Strongman, 2011), extracting diamonds is becoming ever more costly because the need to dig wider and deeper to secure extraction. Moreover, DeBeers, once almost a world monopolist through its control of diamond marketing (even marketing diamonds from other producers for many years), is now confronting competition from mines in Russia, Australia and Canada that are marketed outside of DeBeers structures. If that were not enough, synthetic diamonds, which enjoy many of the same consumer and industrial] properties as Botswana’s production, have gained a foothold in the market. Today, Botswana’s share of the world diamond market is estimated to be about 22 percent – US$2.6 billion of global production of 12.0 billion --down from perhaps 40 percent in 1990. Already, signs of diminishing returns to reliance on diamonds have appeared. Revenues per capita from diamond sales abroad have fallen steadily over the six years. Thus, even if the major mines are able to continue producing at current rates indefinitely, population growth and pressure on prices makes diversifying sources of foreign exchange an imperative. …and other goods lack dynamism Non-diamond goods exports have not filled the breach. Though non-diamond exports have tripled since 2000/01, they have slumped by the end of the decade. This largely reflects the poor performance of beef and textiles and the relative failure of other goods to take off. Moreover, even though the economy has grown steadily over the last decade, non-diamond exports have fallen as a share of non-mining GDP (Figure 9). Said differently, the non-mining economy is not generating exports that would otherwise help diversify the economy. 26 The non-mining economy is not generating exports 40% 35% Exports excluding diamonds as % of 30% non- mining GDP 25% 20% Exports excluding diamond and 15% nickel as % of non-mining GDP 10% 5% 0% Source: Authors’ calculation based on Botswana Central Bank Financial Statistics December 2009 for years 1998-2001 and June 2011 for years 2001-2010. 2009 values are based on revised figures as of June 2011 while 2010 values are based on preliminary values. Figure 9: Few non-mining exports …and even non-diamond exports remain unusually concentrated Even excluding precious stones from the analysis, Botswana’s exports remain highly concentrated. The top 10 products accounted for 72 percent of total non-diamond exports in 2009. These include base metal ores (40%), meat (9 percent), gold (6 percent), women’s outer garments (6 percent), other outer garments (3 percent), men’s outer garments (2 percent), inorganic chemicals (2 percent), motor vehicle parts (2 percent), under-garments (2 percent), and electrical distributors (1 percent) -- Figure 10 shows the cumulative share of exports associated with the first and each subsequent product. The more concave is the line, the greater is the share of the largest products in the export portfolio. Botswana has a far more concentrated pattern than either South Africa or Namibia. More worrisome is the fact that the picture is virtually unchanged in the last decade. Non-diamond exports are highly concentrated… and with little change in the last decade Cumulative export share in 2009 for Cumulative shares, all products the top 50 products 100% 100% 90% 90% 2009 (solid line) 80% 80% 70% 70% Namibia 60% 2000 (dashed line) 60% Botswana 50% 50% 40% South 40% Africa 30% 30% 20% 20% 10% 10% 0% 0% 1 6 11 16 21 26 31 36 41 46 1 51 101 151 201 Source Authors calculation based on Comtrade data. Classification used SITC rev2, 3 digits. Calculations excludes precious stones Figure 10: Export concentration 27 The bulk of these products are resource-based products (Figure 11). They include gold, copper- nickel matte, disodium carbonate (soda ash), and sodium chloride (salt). These products account for the largest share of exports and the most rapidly growing over the last decade. Beef and textiles make up much of the rest. Services exports have given impetus to growth and diversification. These include tourism, transport, financial activities, and others. While travel services account still for a large fraction of service exports, in the recent period the importance of residual category are gaining in importance. These encompass activities such as international telecommunications, and postal and courier services; computer data; news-related service transactions between residents and nonresidents; construction services; royalties and license fees; miscellaneous business, professional, and technical services; and personal, cultural, and recreational services (Figures 12 and 13). …and products with low sophistication Millions US$ 2,000 1,800 1,600 Primary products 1,400 1,200 1,000 Resource based product, others 800 600 Low-tech, other Agro-based products 400 Low-tech textile 200 Medium –tech products High–tech products 0 Note: Calculation based on Lall (2000) and Record et al (2010) based on SITC rev2, 3 digits (exclude precious stones) Figure 11: Concentration on products of low sophistication Travel services still account for a large share of service … but other services are growing rapidly exports… 100 As percentage of commercial service export Computer, 90 communication, and 90 others 80 80 Travel 70 70 60 60 50 Travel 50 40 40 Computer, 30 communication 30 Transport and others 20 20 10 Transport Financial and insurance 10 0 Insurance Botswana Rwanda South Africa Mauritius Kenya 0 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 Source: World Bank, WDI database Source: World Bank, WDI database Figure 12: Travel and tourism Figure 13: Rapid growth in other services However, the country has run a deficit on current account as services imports have been substantially larger than exports and growing at about the same pace. Only travel and tourism have produced surpluses. The gap in other services has narrowed in the last decade, in part because of the emergence of financial activities and new call centers. Still payments for electricity and telecommunications add to the deficit side of the ledger offer possibilities for eventual import substitution. The largest deficit remains in transportation services -- where debits on account have run at four times credits. 28 Botswana remains dependent on the South African market…and fails to reach fast growing markets South Africa buys most of Botswana exports – and much of these are intermediate goods and primary products (i.e., minerals (Figure 14). Intermediate goods include some processed minerals such as nickel matte (sold primarily to Norway), car parts and electrical equipment; primary products are mainly minerals and beef; and among consumer products figures chewing gum. Most exports go to SACU…and few goods exports reach world markets Non-diamond exports to major markets Million US$ 1600 1400 1200 Intermediates 1000 800 Primary 600 Capital goods 400 200 Consumption 0 All SACU SADC EFTA EU US Countries minus SACU Note: Calculation based on BACI product classification based on HS 1988-1992, at the 6 digits (exclude diamonds) Figure 14: Few exports reach markets beyond SACU Exports from Botswana to many countries are far less than their purchasing power and distance would have otherwise indicated. We used a gravity model to analyze pre-recession data for 2005- 2007 to understand better the performance of its exports relative to 47 other major commodity exporters; after excluding the top two products of these exporters from the analysis, we then then looked at the performance of bilateral trade, controlling for country size, distance, per capita income, contiguity, “land-lockedness�, income level and other characteristics (see Annex 2). Figure 15 shows the log of actual exports to a particular country market compared to the level predicted by the gravity model (see Annex 1). Botswana’s trade pattern exhibits a large cluster of countries above the 45 degree line, indicating predicted exports is far higher than actual exports. This means that Botswana is not selling products to many countries that should be comfortably within reach. This stands in stark contrast to South Africa, where actual exports closely correspond to predicted exports. 29 Given its size and location, Botswana should reach more markets Predicted vs. actual exports: Botswana compared with South Africa Bostwana predicted versus actual average exports 2005-2007 South Africa predicted versus actual average 2005-2007 exports ZAF 25 20 USA GBR USA NLD CHN CHN GBR ITA DEU FRA IND ESP BEL IND SGP HKG MOZ JPN 20 JPN NLD ITA SGP FRA ZMB DEU ESP MOZ HKG NAM ZWE CAN AREKOR BEL AUS ZWE L n p re d ic te d ex p o rts L n pre dicte d exp orts PRT BRA 15 SWZ THA IDNTZA MYS AGO CHE KOR TZAARE CAN GRC VNM DNK PAK RUS IRL NZL MUSISR SAU SWENGA ZMB THA AUS AGO CHE TURZAR GHA BRA PAK MYS LSO IDN NGAISR MUS PRT BGD PHL COGPOL EGY FIN CMR MEX KEN RUS VNM SAU TUR GHA KEN MWI ZAR LKA UKR ARG CHLNOR MWI NZL COG GRC MLT CYP ETH PAN COL CIVMDG MAR SDN AUT IRN IRL PHL TTO ECU SEN SLE URY SYC MEXBGD EGY DNK SWE CMR DOM LTU GMBLBR TUN LBY SYR VEN BHRKWT ROM JORYEM GAB PER UGA DZA CZE POL LKA MDG UKR ETH NOR CUB GTMBDI BHS RWA BGR LBN COM EST JAM HUN MRT SVN QAT MLI GIN OMN 15 CHLARG SDN MAR SYC UGA IRN FIN HND GUY SLV PRY VCT ATG GEO LVABRB AZE DJI NER CRIBFA KAZ ISL TGO BEN GNQ IRQ KWT PAN SLE SEN KHM SVKCAF TCD AFGNICBMU MLT JOR LBR BHR TTO SYRCYP TUN DZAYEM RWA GMBGAB URY LBY ROM AUT LCA STP DMASUR HTI BOL ALB VUT WSM BLZPNG GNBFJI HRV ERI UZBLUX LBN DOMQAT OMN MLIPER MRT JAM BGR SLB GRD TJK MDA CPV BIH TON ARM MDV BRN KGZ GIN HUN TGO CZE IRQ NER KAZ GEO CUB KNA MNG BLR NPL TCD ISL ATG SVN FSM KIR TKM MKDLAO 10 PRY HRV BRB VCT CRI ERI BMU GUY MHL HTI NIC SVK BTN GRL TMP DMA LUX MDA BOL GRD SUR SMR MNG KNA MKD 10 5 5 5 10 15 20 5 10 15 20 25 Ln actual exports Ln actual exports Botswana South Africa Source: World Bank staff, gravity model analysis for 2005-2007 (see Annex 3) Figure 14: Botswana should be reaching more markets Many of the markets Botswana under-serves are precisely the fast growing markets of the world. For example in Asia, the world’s fastest growing region, Botswana firms are missing opportunities to supply such dynamic markets as India, Thailand, and Hong Kong – though they are doing relatively well in reaching China (Figure 16). Missed opportunities in Asia Ratio of actual exports to predicted exports (logs) 200% 180% 160% Actual=predicted 140% 120% 100% 80% 60% 40% 20% 0% Qatar Israel Malaysia Pakistan Bangladesh Oman Iraq Kazakstan Iran Russia Indonesia Syria Sri Lanka Georgia Mongolia Jordan Japan Vietname Bahrain Yemen Lebanon Korea India Hong Kong, China China Macao, China Kuwait Saudi Arabia Thailand Singapore United Arab Emirates Phillipines Source: Authors calculation based on a gravity model of trade that controls for typical covariates (Average 2005- 2007) see appendix 2 for a description. Figure 16: Missed opportunities in Asia The problem for Botswana’s merchandise exports is even more evident when changes in Botswana’s market share – an indicator of competitiveness – are juxtaposed with growth rate in world demand. Figure 17 plots a decomposition related to change in the market share of upper- middle income countries in their exported products. The vertical axis measures the change due to the competitiveness of a country, while the horizontal axis shows the part that is due to the type of products and markets served. For any given country, the most advantageous location is to be in the upper right hand quadrant – where a country is gaining market share and is selling in fast- growing markets and/or products. The least advantageous position is in the lower left quadrant – 30 losing competitiveness and in slow-growing markets. Unfortunately, Botswana found itself in this quadrant.9 Poorly positioned: Losing competitiveness… and in slow growing markets Average change in market share (2003-2007) 0.003 Gaining competitiveness Gaining competitiveness in fast in slow growing markets 0.002 growing markets and products and products 0.001 Botswana 0 -0.001 0 0.001 0.002 -0.001 Losing competitiveness in fast Losing competitiveness in slow growing markets and products growing markets and products -0.002 Average growth of world demand Source: ITC calculation based on ITC database for middle income countries and world demand for products Botswana produces. Figure 17: Botswana is poorly positioned to grow its exports One useful measure to assess performance is the index of export market penetration (see Brenton and Newfarmer, 2007). This calculates the number of national markets that a country’s exports reach and divides that total by the total number of countries importing that product portfolio. Obviously, larger countries with their substantial export production will reach a wider array of countries importing these products. For example, in 2004, Germany hit more than 63% of importing country markets; Switzerland reached 34% (World Bank, 2011). South Africa hit over 25 percent in 2009. Still relative to its size, Botswana serves a relative few of the markets importing its export portfolio – about 2% (Figure 18). It also reaches fewer markets controlling for income levels and time to export in days. This low level of penetration is somewhat similar to Uganda and less than half of the reach of Mauritius and Namibia (Figures 19). Chile reached about 8 percent of markets. The silver lining to this story is that Botswana, like the other countries, is steadily expanding its market penetration. The Great Recession has led nearly all countries to reduce the number of products they export even as market penetration in existing product lines has increased. Botswana exports reach only a few markets that import products it makes… 4.5 Index of Export Market Penetration by size of economy 4 3.5 3 Ln IEMP 2.5 2 1.5 1 0.5 0 Botswana 20 25 30 Ln GDP Source: World Bank, World Development Indicators and WITS database. Year 2007. IEMPI based on Harmonized System 1996 at the 6 digits Figure 18: Botswana reaches only a few markets 9 With the ITC’s help, we prepared this same graph using data for 2005-2009, years that included the global recession; in these years, Botswana moved to the top-left quadrant as its share of important mineral markets (including diamonds) increased. 31 …but, like other countries, Botswana is slowly reaching more markets 9% Index of Export Market Penetration: Changes over 2000- 2009 8% 7% 6% Chile 5% Mauritius Kenya 4% 3% Uganda 2% Namibia 1% Botswana 0% 0 2000 4000 6000 8000 10000 12000 14000 Number of products exported Source: Authors calculation based on SITC rev2, 5 digits and on Erik tool for IEMP Figure 19: Exports are beginning to reach new markets Pre-mature death at the extensive margin One indicator of the problem is the lack of staying power of Botswana’s nontraditional products in foreign markets. That is, a product once introduced in export markets is likely to disappear prematurely. Figure 20 captures this by comparing survival rates of products from Botswana with those of South Africa, Chile, and Mauritius over the period 2000-2009. The probability of an export surviving into the second year is about 60% and it drops to under 50% in the third year. In contrast, new exports from South Africa have a 75% probability of survival – but still both outperform Botswana by this measure. Premature death: export survival rates after introduction Survival is much lower than other countries at similar levels of income Kaplan Meier survival estimates Average Export Duration and Income Botswana South Africa 5 0.00 0.25 0.50 0.75 1.00 0.00 0.25 0.50 0.75 1.00 4 3 ZAF 0 2 4 6 8 10 0 2 4 6 8 10 analysis time analysis time MAR EGY TUN MWI MDGKEN CIV ZWE IRN MUS Chile Mauritius 2 TZA GHA SYR LBN NGAUGA COM CMR 0.00 0.25 0.50 0.75 1.00 0.00 0.25 0.50 0.75 1.00 ETH ZMB COG SEN TGO SDN MRT JORDZA GAB BDI BEN BFA GIN NAM MOZYEM MLITCD AGO SWZ SYC SLE RWA CAF GNB GMB BWA NER ERI DJI LSO CPV 1 6 7 8 9 10 11 log_GDPpc_cst_PPP (mean) av_exp_dur African countries (mean) av_exp_dur 0 2 4 6 8 10 0 2 4 6 8 10 analysis time analysis time Fitted values Source: World Bank staff calculations Source: Brenton, Cadot, Pierola, 2011 Figure 20: Comparison of export survival Figure 21: Relatively low survival in Botswana Brenton, Cadot and Pierola (2011) have undertaken the most detailed cross country comparative analysis of survival to date. They find that large sunk costs of entering export markets – in production for export, searching, marketing, creating supply chains – tends to increase export survival. On the other hand, the costs of trading – such as delays crossing borders, satisfying regulations, meeting standards – tend to reduce export survival. In this study’s plot of average survival duration after entry (“survival spells) against per capita income, Botswana substantially under performs other countries at its level of income (Fig 21). This may not be all bad: after all, iit may reflect the high turnover associated with market forces. On the other hand, this underperformance holds for mining as well as agricultural and manufactured products, and the sunk costs in mining are typically high, so below average 32 performance merits concern. Moreover, from their analysis of African survival rates, Brenton, et al, conclude that the low survival rates are heavily influenced by high trading costs, including freight rates and long inland routes as well as burdensome customs and administrative procedures. They also point to the importance of intra-regional trade as a source of learning, especially given the constraints of small scale and underdeveloped financial markets that makes access to credit difficult. Finally, they argue that government policy initiatives to promote exports, mobilize external technical assistance, and lobby for less restrictive rules of origin can have a positive effect. These are all policy domains where Botswana is often below par for its income level – and more important could with some effort readily improve. Roots of Underperformance Undoubtedly part of the reason for these weaknesses is that the long and well managed era of rapid growth based on diamonds was so successful. Rising export values and well managed macroeconomic policies produced steady rises in the Botswana standard of living, and diminished the political salience of diversification as a national priority. To manage the tendency of resource-based export economies to concentrate income in the hands of the wealthy and to generate few jobs opportunities outside of mining, the government adopted policies that tended to be mildly redistributionist, including liberal employment practices in the public sector, special programs for disadvantaged or excluded groups, and heavy investment in education and infrastructure as well as inward looking trade and industrial polices. While successful in producing a stable polity and social contract – and in the case of infrastructure, laying the groundwork of a potentially dynamic non-mineral economy – these policies have only partially mitigated tendencies toward skewed income and job creation. Productivity is relatively low… Average total factor productivity as a percent of South Africa Botswana Argentina Chile Malaysia South Africa Namibia Swaziland Lesotho 0% 25% 50% 75% 100% Source: World Bank, Investment Climate Assessment, 2006 Figure 22: Low total factor productivity Export base of firms is small… While some of these policies produced a mild drag on productivity growth, others were a costly step away from effective diversification policies. This is evident in firm level analysis of total factor productivity, a measure of firm efficiency in using capital, labor and technology. On average Botswana enterprises exhibited less than one-half of the productivity of those in South Africa in 2006 (Figure 20). More revealing, they have lower TFP than other middle income countries – such as Chile, Argentina and Malaysia – as well as Namibia and Swaziland. This suggests that Botswana’s lower wages do not translate into a competitive advantage vis a vis South Africa because the use of all inputs in addition to labor have a lower productivity on average. 33 Recent research has shown that it is the most productive firms that become exporters – in part because this gives them a cost advantage in foreign markets that offsets costs of transportation, investments in product diffferentiation, and gaining a foothold in the new market. It is not surprising that only a few firms in Botswana export. Based on a sample of firms comprising a large share of all industry, less than 10 percent of firms sell anything abroad (Figure 23). Firms in Botswana produce mainly for the domestic market… and too few firms export % of firms that export 20 15 10 5 0 Botswana (2010) Rwanda (2006) Mauritius (2009) South Africa (2007) Source: Enterprise Survey database. Percentage of firms that export directly or indirectly. Figure 23: Production is mainly for the domestic market However, this is not only an issue of productivty. The ratio of exporters to total firms is much lower in Botswana than it is for other countries – including both low-income Rwanda and middle income Mauritius. This suggests that the export base outside of mining is low. Indeed, Botswana’s few exporting firms for the most part export only one product and only to one market. About 40% of firms export only one product to one market– a ratio that has remained constant for the last decade (Figure 24). (By contrast, only 28 percent of South African firms export only one product.) Some 78 percent of exporting firms export only one product, down from 90 percent in 2003. (Only about half of South African firms sell to only one market.) The market of choice for Botswana firms to enter with new products is overwhelmingly South Africa (Figure 25). Too few firms… exporting too few products… to only a few markets… Share of exporters 40% 35% 30% 25% No. of 20% Partner Countries 15% 10% >3 3 5% 2 0% No. of Country 1 1 Markets 2 No. of Products >3 Source: Authors calculation based on Botswana custom authority. Calculations refer to the year 2008. Figure 24: Too few firms exporting too few products to only a few markets The size composition of firms in Botswana together with the structure of production creates an unusually difficult terrain for fostering a more diversified economy. Several recent studies have shown that larger and more productive firms are the first to export because it is their superior 34 productivity which allows them to gain footholds in foreign markets. In Botswana, however, only 10 percent of firms have more than 30 employees, size distribution of firms is dominated by relatively small enterprises (Farole, 2011). Farole (2011) makes the point that Botswana firms have to begin exporting when they are relatively small to obtain economies of scale that cannot be otherwise achieved in the small national market. Two thirds of new exporters choose South Africa first…while South African firms are more diversified Botswana South Africa 100% 100% 90% 90% 80% 80% Share of new entrants 70% Share of new entrants 70% that choose this 60% that choose this 60% market market 50% 50% 40% 40% 30% 30% 20% 20% 10% 10% 0% 0% Source: Authors calculation based on Botswana and South Africa custom data Figure 25: Botswana firms overwhelmingly enter the South African market Not only are Botswana firms on average small but their location in product space – an idea developed by Hausmann and Klinger (2007) -- makes it difficult for them to diversify into “nearby� products. The notion is that every product involves firm capabilities that are highly specific to that activity. Knowledge, physical assets, intermediate inputs, labor requirements, and even the policy environment, among other things, are not homogeneous; rather capabilities are specific to production of each sector. The probability that a country will develop the capability to be good at producing one good is related to its installed capability in the production of other similar, or nearby goods from which the currently existing productive capabilities can be easily adapted. The barriers preventing the emergence of new export activities are less binding for nearby products that require only slight adaptations of existing capacity. Hausmann and Klinger (2010) contend that the structure of production in Botswana is such that the skills of its large firms – predominantly in mining – do not easily permit jumps into different product technologies because firms will not be able to tap into an extant pool of workers with required skills, of suppliers to the new industry, or of specialize infrastructure needs. Hausmann and Klinger (2006) devised a measure for the connectedness of a country’s export basket called “open forest� – a measure that has considerable explanatory power in explaining a country’s ability to diversify its exports and move to new export activities over time. Countries with a high scores on the open forest index, such as India, Indonesia and China, have probability of rapid increases in export sophistication and growth, whereas those with low open forest such as Yemen, Azerbaijan and Venezuela, suffer lagging structural transformation. Hausmann and Klinger (2010) find that Botswana is in this second category. …and FDI is not filling the gap Moreover, foreign investment in Botswana is limited. The country receives less FDI as a share of GDP than many other African countries despite its better performance on the various indices of investment climate. Over the decade 1998-2008, FDI in Botswana averaged about 16% of GDP compared to a regional average of 29%. FDI financed only 13% of gross fixed capital formation, far less than the African regional average of 24% (Figure 26). 35 Stocks and flows, selected countries (average 1999-2009) Zambia 80 Equatorial Guinea Regional averages Stock inward as % of GDP 60 Chad Gambia Lesotho Cape Verde Namibia 40 Mozambique Nigeria Eritrea Togo Swaziland South AfricaUnited Republic of Tanzania Zimbabwe Ghana Malawi Côte d'Ivoire Cameroon 20 Uganda Guinea Ethiopia Mauritius Botswana Madagascar Kenya Gabon Benin Senegal Burundi Burkina Faso Rwanda 0 0 10 20 30 40 50 Flows Inward as % of gross fixed capital formation Source: Unctad database Source: Authors’ calculation based on UNCTAD FDI database Figure 26: FDI plays a small role in Botswana This is despite several positive elements in the investment climate: • Botswana has an average effective tax rate of about 11% of profits, lower than South Africa’s 25% and Namibia’s 16%, to say nothing of Chile’s 19% and China’s 18%. • Botswana has one of the lowest corruption scores in Africa – and registered improvements in standings over the 2006-2009 period (Porter, 2011); according to the WBG Enterprise Survey data, the percentage of firms that expect to make informal payments to public officials to get things done is twice as high in South Africa as Botswana (15% and 7.3% respectively). • Generally security is higher than in most of Africa. According to the World Bank’s Investment Climate Assessment (2006), the cost of crime for the median reporting firm was US$112 per worker per year, or 0.6 percent of sales, lower in absolute amounts than in South Africa and Namibia, if higher than in Chile and other middle income comparator countries. • Worker absenteeism is less than in South Africa – despite having a [comparably] high HIV rate; this lower rate of absenteeism may be associated with strong public and private programs to fight HIV (World Bank, 2006). • Informality is lower in Botswana than in other countries. Some 97% of microenterprises reported being registered with at least one government agency compared to only 75% for Sub-Saharan Africa as a whole (World Bank, 2006). These factors suggest Botswana could attract more foreign investment to build productive capacity – if it can change other elements in the policy environment. Reported impediments include access to visas, registration procedures, and programs that favor inward orientation. Policy spurs to diversification: Aligning incentives, reducing services costs, and promoting exports With this structure of production, the Botswana government has to play a more vigorous role than in other middle-income countries. Its diversification efforts have to be organized into a coherent program in which policies are aligned around common goals. The government has to coordinate a broad-based program that (a) provides incentives that encourage exports, (b) reduces costs of services inputs, and (c) promotes exports with pro-active policies. This report provides deeper diagnosis and policy options in all three areas in remaining chapters. Specifically, this means: 36 Adopting industrial policies that create incentives for exports and efficient imports. The analysis in Chapter 2 suggests that industrial policies by and large are not fully aligned with competitiveness objectives, but rather are dispersed across programs to support import- substitution industries and declining activities rather than dynamic export industries. Adopting trade policies that create incentives to produce for export. The analysis in Chapter 3 points to the facts that the SACU trade policies and Botswana-enacted unilateral non-tariff barriers as well as services trade restrictions interact to create a substantial anti-export bias – and thus undercut Botswana competitiveness. Adopting policies to reduce high costs of trading and high cost key backbone services. Chapter 4 shows that state monopolies, regulatory restrictions, and state institutions drive up the costs of trading across borders, telecommunications, electric power, air transport, and trucking. Promoting new investments to create new dynamism in traditional sectors. Chapter 5 points out that the decline beef sector could be at least partially reverse through new programs, and restructuring the BMC. It also discusses ways to reverse lost policy momentum in tourism and realize sustained growth in Botswana’s tourism industry. Reinvigorating efforts at export promotions and investment promotion. Chapter 6 elaborates on the positive role the government can play in export promotion and investment program, and makes suggestions about ways the government can enhance BEDIA’s role in export development and promotion as well as investment promotion. Diversification entails a broad transformation of the economy. Given the complexity of Botswana’s challenge, it is worth underscoring that implementing only one part of a coherent program is not likely to bear fruit. That is because there is no single policy lever that if pulled will propel diversification. To be sure, some policies are arguably more important that others – removing telecommunications cost disadvantages, realigning industrial policies, and air transport might well be among them. However, enacting even these measures will not realize Botswana’s full potential and will have a much lower pay-off than would predictably result from the synergies actions in all areas. This underscores the importance of sustained leadership from the entire economic cabinet, working closely with the Botswana private sector, to orchestrate this transformation. On its success hinges the living standards of the next generation of Batswana. 37 Chapter 2: Reshaping Industrial Policies to Promote Competiveness and Diversification Botswana has struggled for decades to diversify its economy –with only marginal success. Key to this effort have been a plethora of industrial policies designed to stimulate new activities and export promotion efforts to spur new exports. These involve several different strategies serving different purposes, and sometimes not wholly aligned with competitiveness objectives. The primary instruments of industrial policies have been tax reductions (that is, tax expenditures), subsidies through the fiscal accounts, credit subsidies, and subsidies to state enterprises. They, together with the price incentives embodied in the trade regime, constitute the policy-induced incentives for private firms to engage in new productive activities. Botswana spends about 3 percent of GDP on industrial policies, mainly through agricultural programs and subsidies to parastatals. This chapter reviews these policies and programs with the objective of quantifying expenditures, evaluating their effectiveness in promoting diversification. It concludes that a large share of these subsidies go to activities that are declining or inward looking, and less supportive of the government’s diversification objectives. While some of these programs in agriculture and manufacturing are counterproductive, this is not to imply that these sectors should be abandoned; rather the point is to fine-tune programs and the incentives that surround them to stimulate dynamism and exports, rather than entrench declining and low-productivity activities. The chapter concludes by suggesting options to align these programs with objectives in the Excellence strategy. Key Policies and Strategies Botswana has had several strategies designed to foster specific activities, including economic diversification, industrial development, and export growth. While these do not necessarily have a hierarchy and clearly defined relationships to each, they can be arrayed as in Figure 1, with overarching and broadly stated visions and national development programs being the most comprehensive, the industrial development strategy and a subset of more specific but less integrated policy domains, including trade, competition, and SME policies and the like. 38 n addition, t In ment has la the governm ctor-specifi aunched an array of sec culture, ied policies -- for agric m minerals, urism and th tou T key poli he hubs. The de: icies includ Botswana Ex B S xcellence Strategy (20 008). The “Strategy fo or Economic c Diversificcation and Sustainable GGrowth� is aimed at addressing th he primary challenge o of Botswan s to na, which is iversify the di e economy to t ensure thhat Batswan e to enjoy th na continue e he fruits of sustained economic rowth post depletion of gr o minerals, , especially diamonds. The strate egy is predicated on nternational in l competitiv veness, opeenness, and integrationn with the gl lobal econoomy. The st trategy ims to bene ai efit all secto ors but inclu udes some sector-spec s ies and proj cific activiti jects. The BES env T ombination visages a co n of deregullation and policy p reformm (e.g. ope p en skies to promote ransport and tr p d tourism); improved public finan nce manage ement and b t and other budgeting; tax ncentives (u in unspecified) ernment-led ), and gove d investmen particularly nt projects, p ucture. y in infrastru T Botswan The na Excellennce Strategyy has been officially o addopted by CCabinet, and t be d is meant to pearheaded sp d by the Nat egy Office (NSO, form tional Strate merly Government Imp plementatio on and Co-ordinatio C on Office (GGICO)). Ho owever, immplementatio on appears to have lag gged, and so ome po b other age olicies implemented by encies appea ar to conflict with the BES. T These ay several other overla o policy y strategies and programs (elabora A ated on in Annex 8): • Induustrial Deveelopment Po olicy. The revised IDP provide a fra P aims to p amework fo or ustrial devel indu lopment an cation, leading to susta nd diversific ained emplo oyment crea ation, as mond outpu diam ut declines. • Botsswana Trad de Policy. The policy y, approved d by Parliamment in 2010 0, lays out strategic e policy con trade nsideration ns, including g tariff-baseed measure d duty draw es, taxes and wbacks as welll as non-tariiff measure re used as to es, which ar ools for inddustrial deveelopment. • Natiional Expor ( rt Strategy (2010). Th he National Export Stra ategy (NES e S) focuses expanding curre o exports and ent levels of a fomenting diversifi fication. • Botsswana Inves stment Straategy. Aime ed at attract evels of dom ting high le f mestic and foreign estment, the inve s premised on e strategy is o creating incentives for the priv b vate sector by ucing regula redu ation and reeviewing off the investmment incent tive packagge. • vate Sector Developme Priv D ent Strategy y. The strat tegy is desiggned to proovide a systeematic and coherent fr ramework to t develop o promote the pment and g growth of th s he private sector. 39 • Reservation Policy. Entry to certain activities is regulated and restricted to citizens only (so foreign ownership is not permitted). The scope of reserved activities, while fairly narrow, has gradually been expanding (See Annex 7 for details). • “Hub� Projects. Six specialized structures - termed hubs - have been established in agriculture, diamonds, education, health, innovation and transport to drive diversification and growth, and comprise a mixture of projects, investment promotion initiatives and regulatory/policy reforms. Two other programs are of particular importance for competitiveness because of their size and potential impact: Economic Diversification Drive (EDD). The EDD strategy is at the centerpiece of the Government’s economic diversification efforts, and in many ways seems to supersede earlier initiatives such as the “Botswana Excellence� strategy. The EDD is formulated in two phases: Phase I – the EDD Short-term Strategy, and Phase II – the EDD Medium-to-Long Term Strategy, 2011-2016. The EDD Short-term strategy is focused on local procurement, preference margins and citizen economic empowerment. It is intended to ensure that procuring entities support local manufacturers and service providers by promotion of local procurement through preference margins. The program is applicable to procurement by central and local government, and by parastatals. Phase II of the EDD comprises the Medium to Long-Term Strategy, which “envisages diversification of the economy through the development of globally competitive enterprises that need little or no Government protection and support�. The program comprises seven thematic areas: (i) Sectoral Development and Business Linkages; (ii) Export Development and Promotion; (iii) Investment and Finance; (iv) Quality Control, Standards and Production; (v) Technology Development, Innovation and Transfer; (vi) Research and Development; and (vii) Entrepreneurship Development. The EDD Phase II will be promoted by a new body, the National Economic Diversification Council, and supported by seven thematic teams. To date, Phase I is in operation, while Phase II is being finalized after approval by the cabinet. Agricultural programs. There are several agricultural programs funded by the government. The programs aim to make agriculture competitive and reduce the country’s reliance on imports of agricultural produce that can be viably produced locally. The programs offer financial assistance and technical assistance. The programs include: National Master Plan for Arable Agricultural and Dairy Development (NAMPAADD), Integrated Support Programme for Arable Agriculture Development (ISPAAD), Livestock Management and Infrastructure Development (LIMID). • NAMPAADD: the primary objective of is to promote the commercialization of agriculture, to make it competitive and reduce the country’s reliance on imports of agricultural produce that can be cost-effectively produced locally. This program focuses on dairy, horticulture and rain- fed farming. NAMPAADD has no financial assistance component. Instead it assists farmers with the preparation of business plans for loan applications to financial institutions. It also operates demonstration farms. • ISPAAD: provides support for rain fed crop production, particularly small-scale farmers. Approximately P200 million is spent annually on ISPAAD. • LIMID: one of the main agricultural support schemes and is composed of animal husbandry and fodder support, water development, co-operative poultry abattoirs for small-scale poultry producers. In principle, assistance is extended only to resource-poor farmers. • Veterinary services: are provided for the agricultural sector, primarily the cattle industry (beef and to a smaller extent, dairy). Much of this is support for disease control (e.g. FMD), and for meeting SPS and related requirements for access to the EU market. 40 Taxation and Incentives Many of these programs are constructed around tax incentives and subsidies of one form. The general approach taken by the government to tax incentives and subsidies is that these should be avoided as far as possible. Instead, the preference is for minimal sector- or firm-specific concessions or subsidies, combined with a low general rate of taxation. Overall, Botswana’s tax system is relatively uncomplicated. However, there are some sector-specific tax and subsidy arrangements. Corporate Income Tax With effect from July 2011 the tax regime changed to give a single, unified corporate tax rate of 22%, with no additional corporate tax or offsetting against dividend WHT.10 The dividend withholding tax rate was reduced to 7.5%.11 The change was designed to be neutral in terms of its overall impact although the actual impact will depend on individual companies’ profit distribution practice; the new regime encourages profit retention/reinvestment. A concessional tax rate (15% compared to 22%) is available for manufacturing companies, IFSC-accredited companies, Innovation Hub companies; and other companies on individual approval (requested for agricultural activities). Accelerated capital allowances are provided for mining companies, but not generally elsewhere. Indirect Taxes and Levies The VAT is levied at 12% on all goods and services except for exempt and zero rated items. Exemptions are relatively limited (mainly basic foodstuffs and agricultural inputs). Exports are zero-rated. The VAT turnover threshold is P0.5m. A growing trend in recent years has been the imposition of additional off-budget levies. Prominent among these are the levy applied to alcoholic beverages, at 40 percent of cost/import value; a three percent levy on telecommunications services, to fund the cost of the regulator (BTA); and a 5t/kWh levy on electricity consumption (approximately nine percent), to fund the cost of rural household connections. The latter is effectively a tax on businesses, mining and urban households and is clearly anti-diversification in its impact. A further concern about these levies is that they are off-budget and the expenditures that they fund are not subjected to the normal scrutiny. Firm- or sector-specific tax arrangements Firm- or sector-specific tax arrangements affect agriculture, mining and manufacturing. Development Approval Orders (DAO) and Tax Agreements are available to firms on a case-by- case basis, to provide additional tax relief. This can include a reduced profits tax rate, tax holiday, or any other tax concession. A DAO can be approved by the Minister of Finance but has to be laid before Parliament (and comes into force after one month if no objections), while a Tax Agreement (which would tend to apply to a larger project) has to be approved by Parliament. There is only one Tax Agreement currently in operation and this is for a mining firm and pre- dates the more recent mining tax schedule (see below). DAOs are primarily used for manufacturing firms. Manufacturing. Manufacturing firms benefit from a concessional 15% profits tax rate (implemented through a manufacturing DAO). Manufacturing is defined in the Income Tax Act, and excludes certain activities including packaging, printing, dyeing, and simple assembly, 10 Until July 2011 the general corporate tax regime was a standard profits tax rate of 25%, comprising company tax of 15% plus additional company tax (ACT) of 10%. The ACT could be offset against withholding tax (WHT) on dividends payable to shareholders, and carried forward for five years. The WHT tax rate was 15% of profits distributed as dividends (which could be offset against ACT). 11 Besides the withholding taxes on dividend payments noted above, WHTs are also charged on payments to non-residents for certain transactions (including interest, management fees, royalties etc.), typically at 15% although reduced rates are applicable where there are Double Taxation Agreements (DTAs) with individual countries. Tax losses can be carried forward for a maximum of five years (which means that the benefits of capital allowances could be lost if a firm takes a long period to achieve profitability). 41 although it includes diamond cutting and polishing. The concession is not time-limited. 185 companies have been approved for the concessional manufacturing tax rate. Although no definitive information is available on whether these firms produce for export or for the domestic market, the general presumption is that firms engaged in the production of cut diamonds, vehicles and parts, and textiles are exporters, while most of the remainder supply the domestic market. Only around one-third of the firms that have qualified for tax concessions actually make a taxable profit and pay taxes, while the largest four taxpayers account for around half of taxes paid (Table 1). Table 1: Taxes paid by firms with manufacturing tax concessions Tax year 2008/9 2009/10 2010/11 No. of firms paying tax 50 58 60 Total taxable profit (P mn) 322.5 446.8 520.1 Total tax paid (P mn) 39.3 59.5 80 Tax paid by largest 4 taxpayers 22.3 30.2 39.3 Source: BURS Agriculture. Farming income earned by tax-registered farmers can be combined with income from non-farming sources. The practical effect of this is that tax losses that are typically incurred on farming operations can be offset against taxes due on other income, notably employment income. The tax authorities are concerned that this provision is abused (combined with limited capacity to audit claimed farming losses), and is leading to a significant tax leakage by “part- time� farmers. “Small� farmers (below specified benchmarks such as 300 head of cattle) do not have to register for taxes and hence can escape taxes altogether. VAT exemptions are provided for on selected agricultural inputs. The Agriculture Hub has requested tax concessions (primarily a 15% profits tax) to be applied to all agro-industrial projects (many of which would in any case qualify under the manufacturing concession), all farming operations, and businesses that support agriculture. Mining. Under the Twelfth Schedule of the Income Tax Act, mining firms are subject to a sector-specific variable profits tax rate.12 Mining firms in general are not eligible to negotiate Tax Agreements varying the applicable tax rates. However, diamond-mining firms are permitted to negotiate such agreements. Mining firms are also subject to a royalty on the gross value of production ranging from 3- 10% depending on the mineral. Services. The majority of services companies do not benefit from tax concessions. However, there are two important exceptions: Botswana Innovation Hub (BIH) companies and International Financial Services Centre (IFSC) companies. BIH companies benefit from a concessionary 15% corporate tax rate. The BIH targets firms in the areas of ICT, Mining Technologies, Energy & Environment, and Biotechnology. IFSC companies benefit from a concessionary 15% corporate tax rate and exemption from WHT on payments to non-residents, through to 2020. These benefits are available to companies that meet defined IFSC criteria, mainly (i) to operate in an approved line of business, and (ii) the entire business is outside of Botswana. The IFSC target sectors are: International Banking; International Insurance; Investment Funds; International Business Companies; Business Process 12 The tax is calculated as follows: annual tax rate (%) = 70-(1500/X) where X is the profitability ratio, given by taxable income as a percentage of gross income. The standard tax rate (previously 25%, now 22%) is the minimum, while the effective maximum is 55%. 42 Outsourcing (BPO) and Call Centers; Commodity exchange (Bourse Africa). In 2010/11 42 companies were accredited, and these paid P13 million in taxes with subventions of P9 million. Parastatals. All parastatals and wholly government-owned enterprises are exempt from tax, except for BDC and BMC. However, profit-making parastatals are supposed to pay 25% of profits to government as dividends in lieu of taxation. Costs and Benefits of Tax Concessions These rates generate effective tax rates of about 13.7 percent of value added for non-mining and 29.5 percent for mining activities. The average income tax rates are considerably lower than the headline rates. This may reflect: (i) poor tax compliance; (ii) the impact of personal tax allowances, and in mining, (iii) the effect of capital allowances, and (iv) possible over-estimation of value added figures in the national accounts. Costs of tax expenditures are generally low. Most corporate income tax is paid at the full rate. Said differently, taxes paid by concessional sectors, such as IFSC and manufacturing, are not a large proportion of total corporate income tax. Although accurate data are not available, it is estimated that value added in the sectors covered by tax concessions represents less than 15% of value added in the non-mining private sector. The estimated “loss� from the concessional rate on manufacturing is approximately P50m in 2010/11 – about 2% of non-mining corporate income tax. The overall taxes paid by IFSC companies are dominated by one very large company and as a result are volatile from year to year, and the imputed taxes “forgone� from IFSC companies are therefore also volatile. Unfortunately, benefits are low as well. These tax expenditures appear to have negligible -- if any -- impact in achieving their primary objectives. Manufacturing tax concessions have not had a noticeable impact on the growth of the manufacturing sector. The sector’s share in GDP has fallen from 5% in mid-1990s to under 4% in 2010, and the share of non-mining private sector value added has fallen from 12% to 8%. While there are no data on investment in manufacturing, it is likely that a considerable proportion of manufacturing tax concessions has been granted to firms that would have been in operation anyway (hence resulting in low additionality). More important from a competitiveness perspective, these subsidies are probably going to support declining sectors rather than new dynamic industries. It is likely that a considerable portion of manufacturing tax concessions has been granted to textile/garment firms, a sub-sector that has been extremely volatile with periods of dramatic growth and contraction, and whose underlying competitiveness is questionable. With respect to the IFSC, it is probably the case that companies would not been established without the institutional support of the IFSC and the tax concession. Hence, there appears to be a high level of additionality. However, in contrast to manufacturing where it is likely that many of the firms would have been in operation even without the tax concession, it is likely that many of the IFSC firms are only in operation because of the tax concession, and hence depicting the reduced tax rate as tax “forgone� may not be appropriate in the case of IFSC companies. Nevertheless, given the small size and slow growth of the IFSC, the tax concession has not been particularly successful. Subsidies Direct subsidies to producers Botswana makes relatively limited use of direct subsidies to producers, at least outside of the agricultural sector. Three of four sets of subsidies go to agriculture. The major programs are: • Employment subsidies to textiles • Direct subsidies to arable farmers (ISPAAD) • Indirect subsidies to cattle farmers through veterinary services 43 • Agricultural credit guarantee scheme Employment subsidies in textile/garment production. The only significant one is a wage subsidy paid to textile/garment producers. The subsidy of P20/day was paid to employers of citizen employees in the industry on a reimbursement basis. By mid-2011, approximately 4000 workers were covered. A total budget of P38m was made available over the two-year period (2010-11). For employees on the minimum wage, the subsidy covered two-thirds of wage costs. The provision for the subsidy expired in December 2011, although the industry is lobbying for its reinstatement. The value of the subsidy on a full-year basis of approximately P20m compares with value added in the textiles/garments sub-sector of P150m in 2010. Estimates suggest that the value of the subsidy is greater than the value of taxes derived from the sector, so the industry is a net drain on the fisc. ISPAAD subsidies to arable farmers. ISPAAD provides a subsidy in the form of free seeds, plowing, fertilizer, planting etc for dryland arable farmers, with a full subsidy for small farms and a partial subsidy for larger farms. The cost of ISPAAD and related support programs is approximately P230 million a year. During the 2010/11 crop season, 116,000 farmers were covered by ISPAAD and 370 000 ha were ploughed, of which some 70% was under cereals (maize and sorghum). However, it is estimated that less than 50% of the area planted was harvested, and that yields are extremely low. Rough approximations suggest that the subsidy cost per ton of grain produced is around P5000, more than 3 times the market value of the grain, i.e. there is substantial negative value added from the subsidized activities. The subsidy cost of P230m a year compares with total value added in the crop sector (including unsubsidized, commercially produced crops) of P150m in 2010. ISPAAD has not yet been subject to a formal evaluation. However, informal estimates13 suggest that: • crop yields in ISPAAD-supported farming activities are less than one-fifth of the level required for commercial viability; • around half of the beneficiaries are absentee urban residents, whereas the intended beneficiaries are the rural poor; • the scheme is ineffective at raising the living standards of the rural poor. In addition, there is no evidence from published data that it has helped to boost growth in the agricultural sector. Indirect subsidies to cattle farming. The second major subsidy to producers is the provision of veterinary services to cattle farming (and indirectly to beef industry) by the Department of Veterinary Services (DVS). These services can be divided into general public good services and those that are specifically aimed at meeting SPS standards to enable continued access for beef exports to the EU. The latter are believed to account for the majority of the costs and include sophisticated animal traceability systems demanded by the EU. While the costs of the EU SPS systems are paid from public sources, the benefits of the higher prices for beef received from sales to the EU market (which are above world prices) are appropriated by individual farmers. Whether the benefits of higher EU prices exceed the costs of compliance measures at a national level (i.e. whether it is a worthwhile expenditure for Botswana) has never been subject to a thorough evaluation. However, in early 2011 Botswana lost its eligibility to export to the EU market due to weaknesses in the veterinary accreditation system, and significant further expenditure will be required to regain access that further emphasizes the need for such an evaluation. 13 based on discussions with senior MoA officials 44 Table 3: Veterinary spending and value added in cattle/beef sector Livestock VA Meat VA Total VA DVS budget DVS as % of VA 2008 1026.5 256.7 1,283.2 299.3 23.3% 2009 1031.4 372.6 1,404.0 364.1 25.9% 2010 1462.2 457.9 1,920.2 329.7 17.2% 2011 1884.0 461.5 2345.5 354.7 15.1% Source: Statistics Botswana, MFDP. Agricultural Credit Guarantee Scheme. The Agricultural Credit Guarantee Scheme (ACGS) provides loan insurance for credit provided to dryland arable farmers by two development finance institutions (NDB and CEDA). The AGCS provides insurance against inability to repay loans due to drought, flood or hail. In principle, the scheme works by levying a 5% premium on farmers on the value of eligible loans (for seeds, fertilizer, plowing, fencing, farm machinery etc), which is matched by a 5% premium paid by Government. In the event that “drought� or “flood� is formally declared by the government, the AGCS pays out 85% of the value of eligible loans outstanding. The AGCS is currently under review as it is recognized that the scheme is badly designed and vulnerable to abuse, in that it is not sensitive to regional variation in weather conditions, has moral hazard problems, and has become increasingly politicized. It is clear that the ACGS represents a significant subsidy to the agriculture sector, predominantly commercial farmers (rather than smaller, subsistence oriented farmers). One component of the subsidy is the 50% premium contribution from MFDP, amounting to P13.4 million over the period 1999/2000 to 2010/11, and P2.2 million in the most recent cropping year. The second, larger component is the fact that the scheme is structured in a completely non-commercial and non-sustainable fashion, in that premiums have been inadequate to cover the risk-adjusted liabilities. Taking the above (arbitrary) period as a whole, there has been a subsidy of P57 million, or around P5 million a year. Total subsidies over this period therefore amount to P71 million, with income from farmers covering only 16% of the benefits received. The ongoing review will hopefully amend the scheme to make it sustainable (premiums cover risk-adjusted liabilities), triggered by local climatic conditions rather that national conditions, and to remove inappropriate incentives that make it open to abuse. Subsidies through State Enterprises A major area of direct and indirect subsidy provision is through parastatals. Parastatals – or State-Owned Enterprises (SOEs) - are important in Botswana as several of them are amongst the largest entities in the country outside of the mining sector. They can be grouped as follows: Utilities: Botswana Power Corporation (BPC); Botswana Telecommunications Corporation (BTC); Water Utilities Corporation (WUC); Transport: Air Botswana (AB); Botswana Railways (BR); Finance: Botswana Development Corporation (BDC); Botswana Savings Bank (BSB); Citizen Entrepreneurship Development Agency (CEDA); Botswana Export Credit Insurance (BECI); National Development Bank (NDB) Agricultural support: Botswana Agricultural Marketing Board (BAMB); Botswana Meat Commission (BMC) Other: Botswana Housing Corporation (BHC) Parastatals are established by Acts of Parliament, and hence are statutory corporations rather than incorporated under the Companies Act. Some parastatals are being corporatized (established as limited companies with government as the sole shareholder) in preparation for privatization. 45 Subsidies to parastatals take the following direct and indirect forms: • the fact that most parastatals (apart from BMC and BDC) do not pay tax; • direct budgetary transfers (to meet operating costs); • provision of finance capital, whether through equity, loans or guarantees, which are not provided on commercial terms. Tax Exemptions. Under the Income Tax Act, corporations wholly owned by the Government – apart from BDC and BMC – are exempt from taxation, despite the fact that some of them make considerable profits. In lieu of tax, parastatals are supposed to pay dividends to government equivalent to 25% of profits each year. BDC is liable to taxation as a normal corporation, while BMC is taxed under the Fourth Schedule of the Income Tax Act; BMC taxation is principally a turnover tax based on gross sales proceeds less marketing expenses. The BMC tax regime is perverse, in that it can be liable for tax even when it makes losses (although in such cases, the tax due is usually waived). Direct Budgetary Transfers. Certain parastatals receive direct budgetary support from GoB. This may be for capital replenishment, to cover operating losses, or to cover the cost of special public policy measures that may be implemented on behalf of government, e.g rural electrification, strategic grain reserve management. Implicit Finance Subsidies. Not all budgetary transfers to parastatals are “subsidies�. Payments representing capital contributions are essentially shareholder capital injections. Several parastatals have been undercapitalized in the past, and hence recent capital injections can be viewed as establishing the parastatals on a more commercial footing. However, the provision of finance by government may entail an implicit subsidy. This primarily derives from the fact that government, as sole shareholder, does not always impose a discipline on parastatals to earn a commercial return on capital. Most parastatals do not pay dividends to the shareholder (the payments termed “dividends� are in fact payments in lieu of taxes). Even if no dividends are paid, a commercial parastatal should at least earn profits amounting to a reasonable return on capital. With an estimated cost of capital of 12%14, the parastatal financial data for 2008/9 and 2009/10 indicate few instances of parastatals making sufficient profit to generate this level of return on equity. In addition, government provides direct loan finance to some parastatals, and in other cases provides guarantees for commercial finance. We estimate the average value of sub-economic interest charged on loans to parastatals, and on “free� guarantees, to be 150bps. However, in most cases the major implicit subsidy results from the sub-economic return on capital rather than the sub-economic costs charged for loan finance or guarantees. The most prominent cases of implicit subsidies to parastatals are: • BPC: substantial losses due to rapid increases in costs and controls on electricity tariffs, which have prevented commercial pricing; also large currency hedging losses in 2009/10; government has also provided large equity injections as well as loan guarantees towards the cost of the expansion of power generation capacity in 2010/11; the financing subsidy to BPC was worth approximately P650-P800 million a year in 2008/9 and 2009/10 (and compares to actual revenues over just over P1 billion a year; the subsidy is likely to have risen in 2010/11 due to high expenditure on Morupule B power station and further equity injections and loan guarantees. • WUC: profits substantially below the cost of capital, due to sub-economic pricing; 14 Based on the long-term government bond rate of 9% (at the margin, funds injected into parastatals have to be borrowed), plus a small equity premium. With inflation averaging around 7.5%, this entails a real return on equity of around 4%. 46 • CEDA: substantial losses due to a fundamentally non-commercial business model, and reliance on government funding on which there is no prospect of paying a return or generating a profit; • Air Botswana: continued losses and reliance upon government funding, due to inefficient operations and a non-commercial business model; it is unlikely that the company will pay a return to the shareholder; By contrast, BTC and BDC generate profits for the shareholder – and in BDC’s case also pays taxes – which indicate minimal implicit subsidies. Table 5: Parastatal Subsidies (Explicit and Implicit) (Pmn) Parastatal 2008/9 2009/10 Utilities BPC 913.1 1.205.5 BTC 51.2 -29.4 WUC 116.2 146.8 Transport AB 116.1 100.8 BR 94.3 163.3 Finance BDC -151.5 54.2 BSB 9.7 0.4 CEDA 235.9 336.2 NDB 28.0 24.1 Agriculture Support BAMB -1.6 30.2 BMC -49.7 116.5 Source: Own calculations based on Annual Reports. See Annex 3 for details of calculations Other Policies: Local Preference, Investment Promotion and Price Controls Local Preference and Reservation Policies The new EDD scheme has been in operation since early 2011. It provides preference margins for EDD-registered local firms, with a greater preference margin for smaller firms (Table 6). Table 6: EDD Preference Margins Turnover Preference margin Less than P5 million 15% P5m – P20m 10% Over P20m 5% Source: MTI The scheme is open to all firms in Botswana, both locally-owned and foreign-owned, in agriculture, manufacturing and services. By November 2011, 305 companies had been registered for EDD status (Table 7). Table 7: EDD Registrations Turnover P20m Total Sector Manufacturing 137 37 27 201 Services 86 14 3 103 Agriculture 0 1 0 1 Total 223 52 30 305 Source: MTI 47 No evaluation has yet been carried out as to the extent of procurement from EDD-registered companies, and hence it is not possible to determine either the cost to government or the extent to which it is affecting the private sector. Certain activities are reserved for citizens only, under the Trade Act. New Trade Regulations issued in September 2011 extended the range of reserved activities (a full list is included as Annex 7). Reserved activities are almost entirely retail and small-scale service activities (i.e., non-tradeables). Other sectors reserved for citizens and closed to foreign ownership include small-scale mining, some tourism activities, and road passenger transport. Investment Promotion Organizations An examination of the role and impact of investment promotion organizations is beyond the scope of this chapter, and is partially addressed in an accompanying paper. However, they are briefly included given that they are important players in terms of indirectly influencing investment decisions (indirectly as they do not directly influence prices or returns), and are also important items in the government budget. The four main investment promotion organizations, with their approximate annual government subventions, are shown in Table 8. Table 8: Investment Promotion Organizations & Budgets Organization Annual Budget (Pmn) Botswana Export Development and Investment Authority 65 (BEDIA) Local Enterprise Authority (LEA) 125 International Financial Services Centre (IFSC) 9 Botswana Tourism Organization (BTO) 75 The role of the IFSC is discussed above. BEDIA (currently BITC) has a dual mandate, that of supporting Botswana-based exporters, and of attracting inward investors (FDI). BEDIA’s focus is mainly on manufacturing enterprises. LEA’s role is to provide business support services to SMMEs. Although it provides some general business support, it has adopted a specific focus on agricultural and agro-industrial enterprises, and thus is primarily oriented towards supporting import-substitution. The Botswana Tourism Organization (BTO) provides marketing services for the tourism industry and administers a system of accreditation and standards. Price Controls Botswana makes relatively limited use of price controls. The most closely regulated prices are those of fuel (petrol & diesel) and road passenger transport, for which retail prices are determined by government. Fuel price control also determines the margins earned by wholesalers and retailers. Fuel prices are adjusted monthly in order to reflect changes in international prices and other cost elements such as transport and refining. The intention of fuel price control appears to be to prevent “exploitation� by retailers, particularly those in remote locations. However it also has the effect of preventing price competition and thereby of inhibiting the scope for productivity efficiency gains. The objective of preventing “exploitation�, to the extent that it remains an issue in light of the widespread availability of fuel in most cities, towns and villages, could of course be achieved by setting a maximum rather than a fixed price, which would also encourage competition and efficiency. Similar arguments apply to regulated road passenger transport fares. Other regulated prices include electricity and water (price increases have to be approved at Cabinet level), telecommunications services (which have to be approved by the regulator, the Botswana Telecommunications Authority), and bank charges (changes have to be approved by the Bank of Botswana). 48 Trade Measures Botswana’s ability to implement trade restrictions is limited due to its membership of the Southern African Customs Union, which involves inter alia free trade between member states and a common external tariff (which is de facto determined by South Africa). However, there is scope for limited trade restrictions to be implemented at the national level, including: Infant industry protection can be imposed by any member state to protect a new manufacturing industry (one or more firms), through the imposition of a tariff at the intra-SACU border; the revenues so collected accrue to the common SACU revenue pool and not to the member state. The protection is limited to 8 years, although it can be renewed. Botswana has used this provision on three occasions over the past 40 years, to protect a brewery, a soap manufacturing plant (both protections now expired), and the packaging of UHT milk (40% tariff on imports now in force). Similarly, restrictions on agricultural trade are permitted under the SACU Agreement for “emergent agriculture and related agro-industries� and “any other purposes�, subject to agreement by Member States and “a negotiated sunset clause outlining its conditions and period�. The SACU Agreement also permits a “Member State to prohibit or restrict the importation into or exportation from its area of any goods for economic ….. reasons� but this “shall not be so construed as to permit the prohibition or restriction of the importation by any Member State into its area of goods grown, produced or manufactured in other areas of the Common Customs Area for the purpose of protecting its own industries producing such goods�. Botswana has introduced a number of restrictions on trade in agricultural and related agro- industrial products within SACU. Restricted activities include: • the importation of poultry products (meat and eggs), beef and bread (generally prohibited) • the export of live cattle (generally prohibited) • the export of beef and beef products (restricted to BMC only) • the importation of sugar in containers of less than 50kg (generally prohibited) • the importation of wheat flour (subject to a 15% tariff – officially termed a “levy�) • the importation of various horticultural products (e.g. tomatoes, onions, potatoes etc.) (seasonally prohibited) Trade restrictions are generally initiated by the Ministry of Agriculture but imposed by the Ministry of Trade (typically through the Control of Goods Act). Many of the restrictions listed above appear to be inconsistent with the SACU Agreement (for instance, being used for protection, and not time limited), although it does not appear to be a major issue of contention within SACU at this stage. Proposed restrictions – whether for infant industry protection or other measures - are not subjected to a thorough prior assessment or post-implementation evaluation. The cursory assessments that do take place appear to mostly pay attention to the interests of producers, and pay little attention to the interests of consumers or the impact on domestic prices or competitiveness. The contradictions entailed in this policy are starkly illustrated in the case of poultry. Import restrictions have been in place for 31 years (hence far exceeding the permitted infant industry period), and have supported the emergence of a domestic poultry industry that has made the country largely self-sufficient, as well as creating substantial employment (estimated at 4,500 jobs). However, the price of poultry is well above the price in South Africa (average premium in Botswana estimated at 35%). Hence there is a substantial loss of consumer surplus (estimated at P500 million, or around 0.5% of GDP) and a very high cost per job created (around P125,000) (Grynberg, 2011). From an export perspective, the negative impact of the current set up is clear. Some producers have been exploring the potential for exporting to the EU under the EPA 49 agreement, which would permit duty-free entry to the EU. However, this is not consistent with the continuation of import restrictions (the EU would not grant duty-free entry under the EPA with these restrictions in place). Similarly, the large-scale Zambezi agro-industrial project that is being considered for establishment in northern Botswana originally included an export poultry component, but this has had to be removed because it would have required termination of import restrictions, which would cause major problems for domestic producers (if not for domestic consumers). A similar problem situation exists with UHT milk. The 40% infant industry tariff on imported UHT milk provides a very high Effective Rate of Protection (over 100%) for domestic producers. Although initially lobbied for by an independent local firm (Delta Dairies), which established a UHT packaging plant on the basis of the tariff, two other producers (Parmalat and Clover) have both established UHT packaging plants since the tariff was introduced. The industry now has substantial excess capacity. Although the tariff is time-limited (8 years under the SACU agreement), there appears to be little prospect that the industry can be competitive with imports within that time period. This reflects both a size issue (lack of economies of scale) and inadequate local supplies of raw milk. As with poultry, protection has stimulated the establishment of a local industry and job creation, but with a very high cost per job created (similar to that in the poultry industry). (Charalambides & Ngwenya, 2011) It also comes at the cost of higher prices to consumers (and as with poultry, this mostly impacts on lower-income groups), and with little or no export potential while protection continues. The Balance: Incentives’ Costs, Benefits and Options for Reform Botswana spends about 3% of GDP on a mixture of sectorally and generally focused incentives. For its part, the tax system before concessions generally has few distortions, in that the majority of corporate taxpayers pay tax at the relatively low standard rate and the specific tax regime for mining is comfortably in line with international best practice. Similarly, direct subsidies to producers are limited. However, a clear sectoral bias results from the structure of tax concessions and of direct and indirect subsidies – and it is one that generally favors declining activities over emerging ones, import-substitution over exports, and manufacturing and agriculture over services. The sectors that benefit most from concessions (tax incentives and/or subsidies) are manufacturing (especially textiles and garments) and agriculture (especially crop farming and cattle rearing). There is no evidence that these sectors have grown more rapidly as a result of concessions. There may have been a slight lessening of the sectoral bias on manufacturing with the termination of FAP and its replacement by CEDA and the establishment of the IFSC and the BTO, but still the broad structure of incentives remains. This structure of incentives has the effect of reinforcing anti- export bias, providing incentives to declining sectors, and discouraging services. Parastatals receive considerable implicit subsidies, the main effect of which has been to keep the cost of some utilities below economic costs – especially water and electricity – the impact of which is spread throughout the economy. However, the subsidies as currently structured for BPC do make it more difficult for private sector firms (independent power producers, IPPs) to move into power generation. One immediate priority is to examine whether these subsidies to power promote diversification and competitiveness by keeping a key input cost below its economic cost) – and if so whether they could be structured in such a way as to encourage rather than hinder private investment in power generation. More important, subsidies to parastatals do not always to keep the price of key inputs low; in some cases it may be simply to entrench inefficiency which places a drag on productivity and export industries. One clear example is Air Botswana, where high subsidies have not led to lower airfares. Combined with restrictions on market entry, the high cost and limited supply of 50 air travel services has acted as a disincentive to investment in the tourism sector 15. Subsidies that entrench state monopolies recur in other sectors: for example, subsidies to inefficient parastatals including BMC in agriculture and BTC in telecommunications (see Chapter 5). The total cost to government of the various incentives and subsidies is calculated at an average of P2.7 billion a year over the two most recent years for which data are available (generally 2009- 10), delineated in Table 9. This 3% of GDP amounts to about 7.5 percent of government spending. Nearly two thirds of this is accounted for by subsidies to parastatals, of which the subsidy paid to Botswana Power Corporation accounts for by far the largest share (and nearly 40% of all subsidies). Other recipients of large subsidies are veterinary services and CEDA. These figures relate only to (actual or imputed) costs to government. There are additional costs to the economy, such as the costs to consumers of trade protection (estimated at P500 million for poultry protection alone) or inefficient regulation in telecommunications and air travel. Two main conclusions flow from the above. First, the cost of incentives and subsidies is significant in relation to overall government spending. In an environment where the overall level of government spending has to be reduced to achieve sustainability as mineral revenues decline, all areas of government spending need to be critically examined in order to determine where spending could be reduced. The very high level of subsidies to parastatals is one area where the effectiveness of these subsidies needs to be closely examined. Second, subsidies and incentives on balance do not go to new activities or to promote exports. Of the P2,700 million total, only P 170 go to emerging dynamic sectors that are associated with exports (Figure 2). These are overshadowed by expenditures four times larger to import- substitution programs to declining industries. Moreover, some concessions are orientated towards export-focused activities (beef and textiles/garments) but are also to industries that are losing competitiveness. Others, such as subsidies for arable agriculture, the local preference (EDD) scheme for government procurement, reservation policies and trade measures, have an import-substitution and hence anti-export bias. Table 9: Summary of Major Subsidy and Incentive Costs (annual average 2009-10) Budgetary Imputed Pmn % of total expenditure amount Agricultural subsidies 595 22% ISPAAD 230 8% X Veterinary services 350 13% X ACGS 6 0% X NAMPAADD 9 0% X Major Parastatal Subsidies 1788 65% BPC 1059 38% X X WUC 132 5% X X AB 108 4% X X BR 129 5% X X CEDA 286 10% X X NDB 26 1% X BMC 33 1% X BAMB 14 1% X X Taxes forgone 100 4% Manufacturing 50 2% X IFSC 24 1% X 15 Air Botswana has a monopoly on all scheduled domestic routes and on the most important tourism route (Johannesburg – Maun). Fares on the latter are reputed to be amongst the highest in the world (on a per-km basis). This route is due to be opened in June 2012. 51 Direct producer subsidies 20 1% Textile/garments 20 1% X Subventions to investment promotion 275 10% BEDIA 65 2% X LEA 125 5% X IFSC 10 0% X BTO 75 3% X TOTAL 2753 100% Source: own calculations based on data from MFDP, Annual Reports, BURS, IFSC To be sure, the rough classification in Figure 2 is dependent on broader sectoral policies. For example, the beef sector has been a declining sector for years in Botswana – especially so since the loss of access to the European market -- but there is every reason to believe that, with considerable revision of policies (such as those outlined in Chapter 5), it could become once again a growth sector. Textiles and garments might also have growth potential if policies were aligned with export objectives and costs of services were reduced. A large share of the subsidy pool – roughly half -- is effectively neutral. The final economic consequence for competitiveness of these neutral subsidies depends on the orientation of the rest of the policy framework. If policies provide pricing signals to encourage exports these subsidies to electric power might be used effectively to enhance competitiveness and diversification; if subsidized power goes to inefficient companies selling to the government, these neural subsidies are not aligned with competitiveness objectives. Similarly with the subsidies for LEA and CEDA – they may be neutral in intent, but their practical application may favor import-substitution activities, as appears to be the case. Figure 2 Incentives do not generally reflect diversification objectives Import-substitution Export-promoting Neutral (Anti-export) Declining • ISPAAD (P230m) • Manufacturing tax • Import restrictions concession & subsidy (beef, poultry) (P70m) (P500m); BMC export • Veterinary support monopoly (P350m) Emerging • Air Botswana subsidies • Mining capital (with regulatory allowance restrictions) (P108m) • IFSC tax concession & subventions (P33m) • BTO subventions (P65m) Neutral • EDD / Local • BEDIA subventions • BPC subsidies Preference (P75m) (P1050m) • Reservation policy • EDD medium term • CEDA subsidies strategy (P290m) • LEA subventions (P125m) Dani Rodrik, arguably the leading apostate on industrial policy, has suggested that a well- designed program of subsidies and incentives should have several key characteristics (see Box 1). These include provision for transparency, providing subsidies only to new activities, having clear criteria for success and sunset clauses. It is instructive that few if any of Botswana’s industrial policies adhere to these guidelines. 52 This suggests the government might: • Conduct a brief evaluation of major incentive programs to correlate with best practice of smart industrial policy. Particularly relevant for Botswana are the principles describing transparency, subsidizing only new activities, providing clear objectives, sunset clauses, balanced risk, ensuring competition, and periodic evaluation. This analysis also suggests several specific actions could be undertaken to drive the competitiveness and diversification agenda: • Analyze feasibility of adopting uniform tax rate of all business activities to eliminate bias against services, sufficiently high to assure revenue neutrality. The rationale for giving tax and other incentives to the manufacturing and agricultural sectors (particularly subsistence arable agriculture) is questionable in the context of diversification policy. It seems to be more justified by a perceived need to prop up failing sectors rather than to provide support to sectors with longer-term growth potential. The structure of incentives discriminates against tourism and other services (only offset by the concessions to IFSC companies engaged in offshore business services) that arguably have greater long-term growth potential than manufacturing and agriculture, and provides a disincentive for entrepreneurs to enter these activities. It would be preferable to have a low, standard profits tax rate that does not attempt to guide investment into particular sectors. The wage subsidy for garment/textile firms should be discontinued when the current budgetary provision is exhausted. Tax-deductible capital allowances, used by some countries as an investment incentive, should be avoided as this would provide an incentive for capital intensive production techniques, which is inappropriate in an environment of high unemployment. Box 1 10 Principles for a Smart Industrial Policy 1. Begin by focusing on removal of policy, institutional, and cost elements in the value chain that limit production and exports (e.g., cost of doing business) 2. Transparency: Quantify current spending on industrial policy and present amounts in budget to parliament 3. Provide incentives and subsidies only to “new� activities 4. Objectives: clear with benchmark/criteria for success and failure 5. Sunset clause: phase-out subsidies progressively and automatically over say 3-5 years 6. Risk: Projects should entail private risk commensurate with public risks 7. Competition: Avoid raising barriers to entry and to competition, especially from import competition 8. Agency administering IP: must have demonstrated competence – with clear political oversight and accountability 9. Ministry: Maintain channels of communication with the private sector 10. Evaluations: Subject portfolio of industrial policy programs to regular ex post external evaluation Source: Adapted from Dani Rodrik, 2004 “An Industrial Policy for the 21st Century� • Critically review programs that subsidize import-substitution industries or have an anti- export bias with a view toward revamping them or, in some cases, and phase them down. Such interventions (the left column of Table 2) need to be critically reviewed to determine their cost and benefits. This entails (a) clearly formulating quantifiable objectives, (b) periodically measuring performance of beneficiaries and the program itself to ensure that objectives are being met; and (c) study and report on costs to the government or to consumers and non-beneficiary companies. For example, reservation policy and local preference (EDD) are both designed to help support local entrepreneurship, but none of the conditions (a) – (c) are available. Suggestions for individual programs are outlined below. 53 • Revamp ISPAAD program to avoid creating incentives for farmers to remain in low productivity jobs – in effect poverty traps. (Consider phasing out by 2012/13). • Review EDD to ensure objectives of expanding internationally competitive activities. A risk of the EDD is that companies will orient their activities toward selling to the state and will not look for export activities. This is particularly true if distance or other barriers effectively insulate sellers to the government from foreign competition. This suggests focusing the design on clear firm-level indicators of successful performance criteria, together with a firm- level sunset clause for eligibility under the program. Second, the government might establish ceilings on how much it wishes to spend on the overall program through above-market procurement. • Revamp CEDA program around pro-competitiveness objectives by, for example, allowing joint ventures to participate, by restricting direct loans to SMEs in small amounts, while providing partial credit guarantees to larger enterprises to involve the banks; improve project evaluation with a view to their net benefit to Botswana, using shadow prices that place a premium on tradeable goods; and improve collections and accountability for funds spent. • Phase out programs that rely on trade protection so as to provide incentives for long-term competitiveness. There are some import-substitution activities that are clearly expensive, unproductive and unsustainable (e.g. ISPAAD) or a major barrier to the development of export-focused industries (e.g. trade restrictions). The latter are particularly problematic in that they lead to short-term gains but at the cost of long term stagnation – jobs may be created, but once the domestic market is satisfied, there is no potential for further growth. In addition, such protection adds to the country’s cost base and undermines competitiveness. Policy now needs to focus on improving the competitiveness of such protected industries in order to improve the prospects of their long-term survival and to build export potential. One way of achieving this would be to make such protection time-limited (which at present does not apply in the case of agricultural protection) and to gradually scale down the level of protection for infant industries over the period of that protection16. As an example of the type of measure that could be undertaken to build competitiveness, the domestic poultry industry is required to procure 70% of its feed from domestic sources, a measure supposedly designed to protect maize farmers. However, domestic maize production is completely inadequate to meet demands for animal feed as well as human consumption, and as a result this measure this adds to the poultry industry’s cost base and provides a protected market for domestic poultry feed producers, using imported grains. As such a policy does not appear to be in the interests of the economic efficiency of the poultry industry, maize farmers or of consumers, it should, therefore, be abandoned (Grynberg and Matswapong 2011). • Review the impact of infrastructure subsidies and expenditure from an economic cost-benefit perspective. The provision of infrastructure is generally highly subsidized in Botswana, whether through indirect subsidies for parastatals, cross-subsidies from one group of consumers to another, or direct financing by government. However, the focus of the provision of infrastructure appears to be largely driven by social rather than economic considerations. For example, there are high levels of spending on rural roads, water and electricity supplies, delivering services to sparsely populated areas at a very high cost per capita. This is despite the fact that rural-urban migration continues, and there is little economic benefit from such provision. At the same time, infrastructure that is essential to support economic diversification, such as international internet connectivity – which is particularly important if growth is to be led, at least in part by, services – is well below the standards required. It could be far more economically beneficial to subsidize bandwidth – which has a sharply declining cost curve and hence the magnitude of subsidies required would fall over time – rather than providing public services to areas that are undergoing depopulation. The provision of resources for infrastructure needs to be driven more by economic cost-benefit assessments than by social priorities. Where there are strong social arguments for subsidized provision 16 At present there is no such scaling down of infant industry protection under SACU, and hence no incentive for firms to improve competitiveness during the period of protection. Instead, the incentive for firms is to lobby for an extension of the period of protection. 54 (e.g. water supplies) this should be done through other means (such as stepped tariffs or transparent, budgeted transfers) rather than hidden implicit subsidies to the service provider. • Review the impact of other fiscal, quasi-fiscal and price control measures and bring expenditures on-budget. The plethora of new levies have been introduced for a variety of reasons, but even if the primary objectives are achieved they may have unintended side effects. The alcohol levy is aimed at changing expenditure patterns, but adds to the overall cost of living and diminishes competitiveness. The telecommunications levy is required to fund the regulator, but the level (3%) needs to be reviewed to determine if it is still reasonable in the light of the dramatic growth of cell phone usage. The rate is high by international standards, and hence detracts from competitiveness by raising the cost of an important input to many business activities. It may also lead to a bloated and oversized regulator that can further inhibit business and investment. The electricity levy, introduced for social purposes, is also a tax on businesses and households that detracts from competitiveness. The impact of such new levies, or hidden taxes, on competitiveness needs to be evaluated alongside any consideration of whether they are achieving their primary objectives. For the purposes of transparency and accountability, expenditures financed from the proceeds of such levies should be channeled through the normal budget, rather than being handled through non-transparent dedicated funds. Finally, the relevance of price controls needs to be reviewed, given that the economic and regulatory environment has changed since they were first introduced. First, there is much greater competition in fuel retailing and road passenger transport, suggesting that normal market forces should be sufficient to determine competitive pricing. Second, the new Competition Authority is in a position to determine where abuses have taken place. These developments suggest that statutory price control is unnecessary, and the potential benefits and efficiency gains that can come from competition in these sectors are not being realized. 55 Chapter 3: Disincentives to Export: the Trade Regime Price Incentives to Exporters: The Role of Trade Policy Much like industrial policies, most governments use border barriers to tilt the playing field in favor of some activities, with the objective of using the price system to channel private investment into particular areas. Governments use tariff barriers, non-tariff barriers, and (contingent or temporary) protection with the idea of creating productive capacity and jobs or realizing some future comparative advantage. However, favoring some activities comes at the expense of others. Whereas industrial policy through subsidies and tax expenditures comes at the expense of taxpayers, tariff policy comes at the expense of raising prices to consumers and non- beneficiary industries – and reducing their competitiveness. Beyond these domestic effects, trade ministers can use their leverage in regional and multilateral trade negotiations to increase the access of Botswana exports to foreign markets. Botswana’s trade policy has four dimensions that affect its export diversification potential: • SACU tariffs on goods that convey price signals to its producers, • Botswana’s own unilateral policies at the border through nontariff measures • Unilateral and regional policy toward services • Regional and multilateral initiatives to increase market access abroad. SACU tariffs have historically been set by South Africa as a complement to its own industrial policy. Yet from Botswana’s perspective, the effect of SACU tariffs has been to tax Botswana consumers and producers. Botswana’s use of unilateral border protection, mainly for agriculture, has failed to spur diversification – in fact it has mired activities in the domestic market that might otherwise become export industries. Similarly, unilateral policies toward services has generally missed the opportunity for Botswana to harness competition from regional or international companies to drive domestic productivity gains – rather with the consequence of protecting established monopolies in professional services, air transport, and telecommunication. Nor can barriers in foreign markets be blamed for Botswana’s low diversification: by and large Botswana enjoys preferential terms of access to most major markets. SACU Trade Policy and Merchandise Exports There are several reasons to suppose that trade liberalization might positively affect export diversification: lower input prices allow producers to become competitive across a wider range of products, lower tariffs reduce the cost penalties to exports, and increased price competition can drive improvements in productivity and hence support a wider range of competitive products. Carrere, et al (2011) explored the links between trade liberalization and export diversification to assess whether lowering the costs of inputs and other products toward border import prices would lower the degree of concentration of exports. Using the number of exported products as the measure, they found that, across countries, import liberalization increased diversification. The effects were particularly strong in middle-income countries where, controlling for other characteristics, post-liberalized economies displayed a significantly lower export concentration and significantly greater number of products. More tantalizing from the perspective of Botswana, they found a strong interaction between years of schooling, trade liberalization, and diversification: increasing educational attainment tended to increase diversification only in the presence of trade liberalization. 56 Box 1: Botswana’s Trade Agreements The major trade agreements affecting Botswana are: Southern African Customs Union (SACU): includes South Africa, Namibia, Swaziland and Lesotho; common external tariff set by South Africa (until new SACU tariff setting bodies are up and running) with free trade within SACU; covers trade in goods (not services); revenues distributed to member states from common revenue pool, with bias towards smaller members; scope for intra-SACU trade restrictions through infant industry protection (tariffs), restrictions on imports of agricultural products, and other NTBs (e.g. SPS requirements). Under SACU rules, there is provision for a duty drawback on materials imported for the production of goods that are eventually exported outside of SACU, and similarly for duties on capital equipment used in the production of such goods. SADC Free Trade Area: includes SACU plus ten other countries; free trade covering “substantially all� trade within the FTA (estimated at 85%), with national tariff setting; rules of origin determine eligibility for free trade; covers goods only, although being extended to services; EAC-COMESA-SADC Tripartite: An agreement to link these 3 regional communities, including establishing a Tripartite Free Trade Area encompassing its 26 member countries, enhancement of trade facilitation to improve the flow of goods along transport corridors, joint planning and implementation of infrastructure programmes, and free movement of business persons within the Tripartite region to facilitate the conduct of business. EU/SADC Economic Partnership Agreement (EPA): a provisional EPA applying to trade in goods has been initialled, while negotiations on a services EPA are ongoing. Tariffs in SACU In Botswana, the trade policy regime is stacked against export diversification. The SACU tariff schedule discourages exports from Botswana (as well as the rest of the region). If tariffs are levied on intermediate and capital inputs, and even higher tariffs exist on final goods, the incentive embedded in the price signals is to produce for the local market instead of exporting. Edwards and Lawrence (2008) in their detailed study using 2006 data found that SACU tariffs create an incentive for producers to sell in local markets. The bias in favor of selling manufactures of final goods in the domestic market amounted to a 46 percent premium relative to selling in foreign markets. Much of this was associated with tariffs on inputs which distort the choices of producers considering whether to export and raise their production costs. The anti- export bias for inputs amounted to 22 percent. Agricultural producers selling final goods locally enjoyed only a 10 percent advantage relative to exports (see Figure 1). This level of effective export taxation can be offset by rebates of import tariffs for inputs. South Africa does have a duty drawback system, but it covers only compensation for direct inputs 57 urchased by pu y the exporrter, and doe es not coveer indirect ta ariffs on inp puts purcha f ase locally from hird parties. th . Moreover p r, specific programs ca an also atten dverse effec nuate the ad e cts of these rograms. F pr For example e, South Af frica exporters of autos s and auto p ve an Impor parts receiv rt Rebate C Credit Certif d on the loc ficate based cal value of exports, annd this can bbe traded or ay tariffs r used to pa n imported components or fully assemble on a veehicles. A second s proggram is for clothing annd textile xporters, w ex which allowss them to cl laim a rebatte for proveen exports. Firms in Bot tswana are disadvantag ged by havi hase inputs from the re ing to purch ices egion at pri nflated by th in f the tariff. Analysis of firm level he value of l data show ws that manu f ufacturing firms in B Botswana ource 85-90 so 0 percent of f their impoorted inputs from Southh Africa (Fi f these igure 2). If nputs were sourced fro in om other co ountries, whhere the SACU MFN ta age tariff ariff applies, the avera n the impor on w rt bundle would be 10. .6 percent. This implies that Botsswana firmms are paying a remium on these impo pr orts, costs th m at a disad hat put them dvantage in global mar rkets. To be sure, hese numbe th ers have comme down sl ecent years, but only m lightly in re marginally so. This system contributes T s to the alreeady comple ex incentive structure embedded in the tariff f. Even hough the S th SACU tariff h a relativ f schedule has vely high nuumber of ze ero-rated du hese are uty lines, th ffset by a la of arge numbe p er of tariff peaks – 21%% of customms lines hav f 15 percent ve tariffs of t or more, nd this disp an persion disto orts incentiives across producers. p Moreover r, the SACU U tariff scheedule had ver 100 sep ov fs bands, co parate tariff omplicating administra ation and crreating oftenn enormous s ncentives to in o corruption n. The max ximum rate ranged from m 346% the e BNLS sta ates to over 1000% n South Afr in rica (Behar and Lawrence, 2008). . 58 Table 2 Source: Behar and Lawrence, 2011 Income losses in Botswana from the tariff schedule are offset by the favorable distribution of revenues from the SACU tariff pool. Although tariffs cost Botswana US$12 -24 million in static losses, the country receives some US$1.2 billion (ZAR 9,167 m) in receipts from the common tariff pool.17 Even if the analysis adjusts the payment to reflect only customs duties that should be paid under a more equitable system less generous to Botswana, the transfer could be US$420 million.18 From a competitiveness perspective, the resource flows are channeled from private Botswana consumers and producers to South Africa and returned (10-fold) to the Botswana public sector. While some of the resulting resource flows find their way to private consumers – in the form of public sector wages -- and private producers who sell to the government or receive direct subsidies from the government, the overall effect is to undermine the long- term competitiveness of Botswana’s private productive sector. The effects of SACU tariffs on income distribution effects are decidedly anti-poor. This is because the poor consume a higher proportion of tradable goods – the poorest two deciles of Batswana spend on average more than 50 percent of household expenditures on food and clothing – whereas the rich spend proportionately more on services (Edwards and Lawrence, 2008). The most frequently cited rationale for these tariffs is jobs. Indeed were tariffs to be eliminated, Edwards and Lawrence calculate that it would cost SACU about 26,000 jobs, about 12,000 of which are in the auto industry alone. However, consumers pay the price for these tariff incentives, and overall national income is lower because of welfare losses. Edwards and Lawrence estimate that consumers in SACU pay “an astounding� some R 2 million (US$280,000) per job created. Within SACU, it is likely that Botswana consumers pay for relatively more for expensive jobs created in SACU. This conjecture arises from a careful look at the tariff schedule. Botswana imports more than 40 percent of its consumer goods over a 30 percent or greater tariff – and a full one third over a 40% tariff. South Africa, by contrast, imports less than 20 percent of its consumer goods over the 40% tariff mark. 17 This is calculated by taking the static losses associated with tariffs from Edwards and Lawrence (= 0.1 percent of GDP in 2006 and 0.2 percent for traded sectors) times 2009 GDP from World Bank, and comparing them with the projected receipts from the tariff pool taken from CIE 2010:19, all converted at current exchange rates. 18 This calculation uses only the customs revenue component based on the formula proposed by the CIE, 2010 study at current exchange rates; this formula has been rejected in SACU discussions. 59 Anti-dumping Contingent protection is often an element of the trade regime that can raise prices to consumers or producers in the protected market. As the dominant partner in SACU, South Africa has made the decisions on anti-dumping issues. Since the mid-1990s, some large developing countries joined the ranks of the the US, EU, Canada and Australia as leading users of anti-dumping actions. Indeed South Africa increased its use throughout the late 1990s before peaking in 2001-02. Since then, however, recourse to antidumping by South Africa has tailed off (see Bown, 2011a and Edwards, 2011), and the country resisted the pressure to use anti-dumping even during the Great Recession in 2008-2009. Between 2005 and 2009, South Africa imposed duties in 11 cases, six of which were in 2005 alone. These 11 cases affected US$2.3 billion of Botswana’s imports – and led to decreases in imports in five of the eight cases for which data were available (Bown, 2011b). Table 3. Botswana’s Imports of Products Affected by new South African Antidumping Measures Imposed During 2005-2010 Imports from Imports from world in year world in year Change in prior to after measure imports Year initiation imposed Initiated Product and foreign target 1 2005 Glass Mirrors from India and Indonesia 179 141 (37) 2 2005 Glass from Indonesia 280 285 5 3 2005 Polyethylene Terephthalate (PET) from 57 32 (25) India, South Korea and Taiwan 4 2005 Biaxially Oriented Polypropylene 520 1,160 640 (BOPP) Film from Brazil 5 2007 Steel Chain from China 96 63 (33) 6 2008 Fatty Acid from Sweden 2 26 24 7 2008 Steel Sinks from China and Malaysia 1,173 1,040 (132) 8 2009 Staple Fibre from China 24 11 (13) Total 2,330 2,759 429 Average per case-related product 291 345 54 Notes: trade flows are thousands of current US dollars from UN Comtrade’s import data at the 6-digit Harmonized System level (HS 1996). There were three additional cases with measures imposed during this period that are excluded from the table for data availability reasons: Paper and Paperboard from South Korea (2005), and Plates/Sheets/Film/Foil and Strip of Polymers of Vinyl Chloride (PVC) from China and Taiwan (2007). 60 teral Polic Unilat ariff Barri cies: Nonta iers Under SACU U U arrangem ments Botsw wana can int troduce non iers to trade ntariff barri tural and e in agricult ther produc ot ement of ot cts, subject to the agree ther SACU states and with a nego otiated sunsset lause- if wi cl s should no ith the proviso that this ot be “for puurposes of pprotecting its own indu ustries.� T Ministry The ulture initiat y of Agricu tes these res strictions th hat are impoosed by the o Trade. e Ministry of n fact, Botswana has in In s ntroduced several de restriction trad ns, includinng: • Prohhibitions onn poultry annd eggs, bee ef, bread, wheat w (subject to a 15% levy flour ( y), sugar ontainers of in co 5 kg, and the export of live cattl f less than 50 le; • Rest tricting perm mission to export e beef p f and beef products to the BMC; • Rest n imports of trictions on egetables to f selected ve o off-seasonn; • A taariff of 40% m % on UHT milk; • Douuble transfor rmation rul le for imporrts from SAADC The 40% tar T riff on UHT T milk indee ed precipitaated new investment in n packagingg plants – an nd ubsequent o su over investmment that has created excess e acity. This capacity ca capa an only achi ieve conomies o ec ough export of scale thro ts, but the ta ariff preven nts exports within SAC CU. Flatter rs (2010) stimated tha es at protectio on on UHT milk costs Batswana consumers c US$16 mill U lion annual lly. This, ccording to ac o World Ban e nk (2011) estimates, am s mounts to some US$160,000 per r job saved, at a time w when the aveerage annua al wage wo ould be abou ut US$ 150 00. Grynbe a Jefferis erg (2010) and s (2011) ecount the w re ways non-ta ariff barrier rs have been n counterprroductive in ry industry. Sunset n the poultr lauses notw cl withstanding g, restrictions have bee en in place for 31 yearrs. Not only axed y has this ta onsumers, b co al customer but potentia rs as well. When W oducer want a pro ort to establi ted to expo ish a major m ern export industry, northe i it would w e required lifting the im have w SACU mport ban with U. Given he choice be th etween new w exports in n competitio on with impports and mmaintaining protection, the overnment elected to keep go k the baan in place. This decis oreclosed po sion also fo ossible expo orts to he EU unde th a er the EPA agreement (see discussion in Cha apter 2). e in Servic Trade ces One of the m O most pervasive binding g constraints to export growth, pro i oductivity increases, a and ncreases in national inc in he high cost comes is th t and inadeq ty of service quate qualit es, particularly nfrastructur in re and profeessional services. Sev veral studies have mad b de the link between vestments inv n infrastruct in creasing the ture and inc e capacity to t trade. Fo or example, , Limao andd Venables (2001) tudied the r st p between ro relationship oads and telecommuni ications and d shipping costs, c and thhen the elation betw re ween shippi nd trade vol ing costs an lumes. The ey found tha t ovement in transport at an impro 61 annd commun nication inf m frastructure from the median score e on survey ys to the hig p ghest 25th percentile s associated is d with a deccrease in traansport cost rcentage poi ts of 12 per ints; this in turn is assoociated with w an incre ease in trad de volumes of 28 perce ent.19 More l eover, they show that landlocked countries ace higher t fa transport coost since the eir ability to o trade depeends also on the infras structure off the neeighboring transit countries. For r example, ini East Afriica, goods b bound for la c andlocked countries aced the tim fa me equivale ent of at leasst three clea arance proccesses of cooastal count tries. “Poo or nfrastructur in re accounts for 40 perc cent of preddicted transpport costs fo for coastal countries c nd up to an 60 or landlock 0 percent fo ked countrie es.� Furthe ermore, for landlocked d countries, they calcul lated that im mprovemen nts in their own o infrastr ructure fromm the 25th percentile p o the 75th pe to ercentile would ffectively o ef m overcome more than haalf the disad dvantage of f being landdlocked (Li V imao and Venables, 20001). n Botswana In i a, network infrastructu ure is better than that inn many Afr rican countr l less ries but still deeveloped re ther countri elative to ot ies of the saame per cap pita income e (Figure 3). Many of f the cost diisadvantage e es to firms emanate fro om policies uperimposed s that are su tructure use d on infrast e (such as n transport). One elem in ment of poli icy is the re estrictiveneess of new e ce regulatio entry or pric on that limits compe etition that would othe erwise spur efficiency. These tak m of Mode 3 ke the form estrictions – that is lim re mits imposed d on foreign n services providers p esstablishing a commerc cial prresence—a and Mode 4 restrictions s that imped de the tempporary mov vement of laabor. This is evvident in th he World Ba ank’s Servi R ices Trade Restrictiven ness Index ( (STRI).20 Botswana B s is ubstantially su y more restr ervices than rictive in se n other comp parator cou ure 4). It is untries (Figu s more han twice as th e as Mauriti s restrictive ius and substantially more m C restrictive than Chile. While e B Botswana o is relatively open in retaail banking and retail trade, t much more restrictive in it is m i prrofessional services (n notably acco ountancy an nd legal serrvices), trannsportation and elecommun te nications (Fi igure 5). 9 19 They take as aan infrastructuree indicator four components: th ail road per squa he density of ra are km, the density of road andd of paved oad per square k ro km and the num mber of telephon ne mainlines per ndicator has bee r capita. The in en widely used by other resear rchers to roxy for the qua pr ucture cost and thus, the cost of transport and communication ality of infrastru n (See Carrère, C., (2006). “Reevisiting the ffects of regiona ef al trade agreeme ents on trade floows with prope model“, Europe er specification of the gravity m ean Economic Review R , Vol. 0/2: 223- 247.) 50 0 20 To capture thee broad restrictivveness of servic ces trade policiees and commitm ments, a summa ictions was prep ary of key restri pared for ach sector-mode ea e. Then, each suummary was ma apped on a 5- point p scale rangi ) to 100 (highly ing from 0 (for no restrictions) y restricted), wi mediate levels of ith three interm s (25, 50 and 75 f restrictiveness 5). Sector results are aggregateed across modes of supply usin ng weights hat reflect judgm th ments of the relaative importanc ce of the differennt modes for a sector. For exammple, mode 4 (t temporary mov vement of uppliers) is impo su ortant for professional services lecommunicatio s, but not for tel ons, where mod de 3 is the domi c inant mode of contesting a m market. estrictiveness in Sector re ndices are aggre egated using sector GDP share ee Gootiiz and Mattoo, 2009) and Borchet, es as weights (se Gootiiz and Matt too, 2011 (forthhcoming). 62 This lack of openness is T s one eleme ent that conntributes to the below-a average perrformance ini two ectors partic se cularly impportant to tr rade, transport and tele ecommunications. In each e d case, domestic olicy barrie po ers interact with extern b nal market barriers in SACU S educe comp to re petition thatt would therwise dr ot rive product tivity increaases. The problems p n these secto in d ors require the more detailed nalysis pres an sented in Chhapter 4, buut suffice it t to say, tha ctiveness on at the restric n entry into these ervices goes some dist se tance towar rd explaininng the poor performanc ce Botswan na registers when ompared to co o other coun milar per cap ntries of sim pita income e (Figure 5)). Controlli er factors, ing for othe Behar B Edwards (20 and E 011) found that t Botswa ana perform med well be elow averag s ge in these sectors or its level o fo ta income; its of per capit i performa ance match hed the aver rage performmance of co ountries w per cap with pita incomess roughly $1,000 lowe er. Enacting g the policyy recommen ndations in Chapter 4 would low veness leve wer restrictiv i Botswana els evident in a’s STRI an s nd act as a spur ductivity to prod mprovemen im nts in these sectors. While teleco W ommunicati ions and traansport are dealt d i greater d with in depth in Cha de in apter 4, trad ervices is particularly important se i i two other in nal services and electri r services – profession ic power ularly impor – are particu rtant as inpu roductive sector. uts to the pr Professional Service P es and Visa as (Mode 4) 4 A service sec ticular impo ctor of part ortance for competitive eness is pro s ofessional services. As conomies b ec become mor re complex and compa anies wish to t expand th heir producct and servicces lines, hey almost always nee th ed skills not l t available locally. Th ularly true in his is particu i Botswana a where, ecause of th be he small maarket and reelatively smmall pool off profession xpertise in a variety nals with ex f subsectors of nical fields. The World s and techn d Bank (2011) underto ook an exten nsive studyy of rofessional services ba pr ased on a suurvey in six x countries in the SAD DC region. The s T study showed hat firms us th sing accounnting, legal and enginee ering servic ces have hig gher averagge labor prooductivity han firms w th without reliaance on professional se ervices. It also reveal led the deficcit in access to these ervices was se s substantial, particular ase of scien rly in the ca ntists and enngineers as well as acc counting nd legal ser an rvices. Moreover, th M ons on entry he restrictio y in Botswa ana are subsstantially hi f many ot igher than for ther omparator c co countries – particularly s y for legal services and engineeri ing as well as for accou untancy. B Botswana mposes stric im cter entry reegulations than t A South Africa legal and en for l s ngineering services, nd much str an ricter entry regulationss for legal, engineering ounting serv g, and acco vices than suuch iverse higher-income countries di c ass Chile, Turrkey, Braziil, Mexico, and Korea (World Ban nk Group, G 20111). Moreo over, entry restrictions r on foreign firms suppl hree princip lying the th pal skill roups – acc gr l countancy, legal servicces, and enggineering – are higher in Botswan K na than in Korea, Chile, C and evven China. Among th he six southe ern African B n countries surveyed, Botswana s the is most m restrict tive in legall services annd second most m restric gineering. Not ctive in eng N surprisi ingly, hese restrict th tions contri carcity that has resulted in higher wage prem ibute to a sc mia for work kers in hese three skill areas. For example, monthly th y wage data t skill prem a reveal that mia for accou untants, 63 on a PPP-adjusted basis, was higher in both South Africa and Botswana than for the US and Germany. Engineers in Botswana enjoyed a skill premium second only to the United States. While this undoubtedly generates political pressure to maintain the restrictions, these higher costs undermine the competitiveness of Botswana enterprises. Despite these shortages and high pay-offs to employing foreign professionals, enterprises complain that obtaining access to work visas and permits is unusually difficult in Botswana. Work permits can take up to six months rather than the target time of two weeks (Imani, 2010: 57). By comparison, Rwanda, for example, is a poor country but has reduced its work visa time to about two weeks. If the underlying reason for delays in granting work permits and visas is a view that high-skilled foreign workers are a substitute for domestic workers, then this view should be re-examined. Rather than increasing employment and wages for citizens, restrictions on the employment of high-skilled foreign workers do the opposite, curtailing investment and overall job creation. High-skilled foreign workers are often compliments, not substitutes, for domestic workers, particularly the medium and low-skilled. By restricting the use of high-skilled foreign workers in its economy, Botswana is reducing the demand for human capital in its economy and worsening unemployment. On the other hand, if Botswana were to adopt liberalized policies towards high-skilled immigration and work permission, this would not decrease the opportunities for Botswana’s citizens, it would increase them. (Hausmann, 2010) This suggests that there is much Botswana could do to improve the functioning of professional services markets. 21 Possible policies include: • Reduce cumulative entry requirements on the establishment of foreign firms (mode 3), particularly in accountancy and law; • Reduce restrictions on conduct that impede competition, including fixing prices, restrictions on business organization, and advertising; • Remove explicit barriers to the movement of professionals (mode 4), such as labor market tests, nationality requirements, and work permits – starting first with SACU/SADC professionals, with a view to expanding to the world; • Advocate within SACU and SADC the creation of a professional services knowledge platform to produce and disseminate information on restrictions, address knowledge gaps such as regulatory impact assessments, and address political economy constraints through dialogue among policy makers in the region to remove barriers to competition. Electric power Although Botswana’s electricity tariffs have been low by regional and international standards, Botswana enterprises were in the past been at a disadvantage relative to their South African counterparts as electricity prices for small businesses in Botswana were far higher than those in South Africa. In 2009, Botswana electricity prices for small businesses were nearly double prices those in South Africa (0.54 ZAR/kWh vs. 0.31)22. Over the past three years this has been changing as implicit subsidies in South Africa have been gradually dismantled and the differences with Botswana tariffs have diminished and nearly disappeared. Average tariffs in South Africa are projected to reach US¢ 7.7 per kWh in 2012/13, compared to about US¢ 7.6 per kWh in Botswana today. Botswana consumers do, however, pay very high connection charges. Domestic consumers, for instance, have to pay connection charges 8.5 times as high as those paid by consumers in South Africa. This is partly due to the BPC policy that connection charges are not recovered through the tariff. 21 See WBG, 2011 Chapter 3 and P. Brenton, “Developing Professional Services in Southern Africa through Regional Integration� Presentation to Gaborone Conference of Botswana Competitiveness, November 2011. 22 Grynberg, 2010. 64 No less important, electricity supply is unreliable, forcing companies to install their own generation capacity. Botswana firms typically face an average of 4.5 outages per month compared to 2.1 for South Africa. And, if the surveys are to be believed, the situation seems to be getting worse: in 2006 firms reported outages of 1.7 days per month, half those in the 2010 survey. Consequently, more than one-third of firms in Botswana had to rely on local generators, twice the percentage of South African firms (World Bank, investment climate surveys), driving up their costs. On average in Sub-Saharan Africa, each un-served kWh is associated with an estimated USD 1-3 of lost sales and production.23 This situation should change for the better as Morupule B power supplies come on line, although further medium- and long term investments and regional solutions are essential to avoid a return to power shortages in the future. Botswana has in the past been dependent on imports of power from South Africa. Grynberg (2010a) estimates that Botswana imports amounted to some 180 percent of domestic capacity in 2008. This is despite having huge deposits of coal and coal-based methane that could be competitively developed. The Morupule site alone is one of the largest coal deposits in the world. However, because South Africa traditionally subsidized its power tariffs as part of the Apartheid era policy of not charging for the costs of capital, it became more economical for Botswana to import power than to exploit local reserves. To the export price subsidy was added the additional revenue transfers from the tariff pooling scheme because electricity imports were counted as part of intra-regional trade, the basis for the distribution of tariff revenue pool resources. However, gradually ESKOM’s excess capacity in the system was taken up, to the point where shortages began to appear, culminating in an energy crisis in 2007/2008. This forced Botswana to bring in an expensive diesel station to operate temporarily. Meanwhile, plans to develop the Morupule site were accelerated. By 2013, as new capacity in Botswana comes on stream, supply will be stabilized, and excess capacity will begin to appear (Grynberg, 2010). Given regional shortages in power supply, it is not inconceivable that power could become a new export for Botswana. Through 2025, it is estimated that the Southern African Power Pool (SAPP) will require about 39,000 MW of additional capacity. Moreover, there may be an economic case for adjusting the pricing structure of electricity to encourage selected mining projects and small industry. That said, the low tariff regime supported by abundant, cheap electricity imports from South Africa ended some years ago. And while targeted electricity subsidies may be an option, they should be considered within a broader power strategy, including a clear sector development plan and regulatory framework to encourage private investment in the industry and spur competitiveness. Gaining Access to Foreign Markets: Improving Regional Agreements A final element of trade policy is negotiating access to foreign markets. In fact, Botswana does enjoy access to SACU, SADC, and OECD markets at preferential rates (Figure 6). Its exporters faced a low simple average tariff ranging from zero to 1.4% for the EU, Japan, and the US in 2009. Using the more elaborate market access indicator of the World Bank’s Overall Trade Restrictiveness Indicator (MA-OTRI) which captures the role of quantitative restrictions as well as tariffs for all markets to which Botswana exports, this picture is born out as well. Because of its beef exports, foreign markets are less welcoming on average in agriculture than for industrial products (Figures 7 and 8). By and large market access associated with high border barriers does not appear to be a problem limiting Botswana’s export diversification. 23 World Bank, 2009. 65 Figure 6 F Figure 7 e8 Figure That said, so T e ome issues emanating from f olicy enviro the po ecting Botsw onment affe wana firms are best ddressed th ad hrough regio onal trade platforms p n SACU, SA in ADC, and CCOMESA. The regional genda24 wo ag e: ould include • ucing ineffi redu c iciencies in transport, customs nd logistics; an • monizing fi harm ms that impo iscal system ose costs onn trade; • moving restr rem ts on rules of rictive limit o origin; • reasing the efficiency of incr o standardds administr ration; • moving other NTBs tha rem at circumscr ribe regiona al sourcing;; • moting the mutual recognition of prom ons of prof f qualificatio fessionals. 4 24 These are elab d Bank, 2011, Harnessing borated in World H gional Integrati Reg ion for Trade an outhern Africa. nd Growth in So 66 Inefficiencies in transport, customs and logistics raise trade costs. As seen in chapter 1, inadequate transport administration, inefficiencies in customs procedures (including delays at road checks, borders and at ports), and poor quality and costly logistics due to weak competition among service providers drive up the costs of Botswana’s exports in foreign markets. Each day saved in shipping has been estimated to be equivalent to a cost reduction of 0.8 percentage points of ad valorem tariff (Hummels, 2001). And each day a product is delayed prior to being shipped reduces trade by one percent, equivalent to a country distancing itself from its trade partners by 70 kilometers (Djankov et al., 2006). Shoprite (a South African retailer) reports that each day one of its trucks is delayed at a border costs US$500 (Charalambides, 2010). Transport costs and transit delays in Southern Africa are discussed in the next chapter but suffice it to say they are higher than in most other regions, in particular for the landlocked countries. Consequently, corridors with infrastructure in average condition can sometimes be as slow as corridors with an infrastructure in bad condition (Arvis et al., 2010). Botswana has implemented various measures to improve custom procedures, including the introduction of Single Administrative Document, the rolling out of online submission of declarations, and the supervision of loading of export consignments at the traders’ premises for regular exporters rather than physical inspection at the border. While these have improved Botswana’s logistic performance, they were not sufficient to reduce the overall costs of trading across borders. Another source of delay within the region concerns the work permit regime for foreign truck drivers crossing the border into South Africa. Both SADC and COMESA have adopted measures and rules aimed at liberalizing market access for transport and international road freight, harmonizing rules to ensure interoperability and developing infrastructure. Cumbersome fiscal arrangements necessitate borders. Fiscal borders across Southern African countries are unnecessarily complicated, inefficient and contribute to higher trade costs. The three main reasons SACU retains internal border posts, even though it is a customs union, are to capture data on intra-SACU trade for revenue sharing purposes; administer NTBs e.g. infant industry protection; and, because domestic sales taxes have not yet been harmonized, requiring refunds and payments . The costs and delays associated with these procedures reduce trade flows between Southern African countries. Jitsing and Stern (2008) estimate that the costs arising from the application of different VAT systems on intra-SACU trade can amount to 2 percent of the value of each transaction. The root cause of these costs arises from the risk of consignments being taxed twice in both the exporting and importing countries as well as delays in receiving VAT refunds. Restrictive rules of origin limit preferential trade. Onerous local content requirements in rules of origin (ROOs) reduce the utilization of tariff preferences offered by RTAs, particularly in labor intensive sectors (e.g. clothing) that use capital intensive inputs not produced competitively in the region (e.g. fabrics). A recent example of the cost associated with meeting ROOs involves SACU moving to more restrictive rules (double transformation) on selected clothing imports from Malawi, Mozambique, Tanzania and Zambia following the expiration of the MMTZ-SACU Market Access Arrangement at the beginning of 2010. This has resulted in clothing producers in these countries being no longer able to compete in the regional market (e.g. Bidserv in Malawi). It has also further distorted investment decisions as some of these firms have relocated to the BLNS countries as a result of the change to avoid the loss of preferences in supplying the South African market. For other products where ROOs have been so contentious (e.g. wheat flour) or simply not agreed (e.g. certain electrical products for which rules were only finalized as recently as April 2010) preferential trade within the region has been effectively prohibited (Naumann, 2008). Poorly designed standards limit consumer choice and hamper trade. As tariff barriers have come down on both regional and international trade, the way in which technical regulations and standards are designed and implemented is playing an increasingly important role in trade outcomes. Used correctly, technical regulations and standards influence the possible routes for firms desiring to reach foreign markets by conveying knowledge about requirements for market 67 acceptability, reducing uncertainty for both producers and consumers. Compulsory technical regulations can secure a public policy objective such as health, safety and environmental or consumer protection. However, standards regimes in Southern Africa are not achieving these objectives. Instead they are often characterized by an over-reliance on mandatory inspections and certifications, unique national (rather than regional or international) standards, overlapping responsibilities for regulation and, occasionally, heavy government involvement in all dimensions of the standards system. Furthermore, when domestic and foreign technical regulations and conformity assessment regimes differ, additional costs are imposed on suppliers who cater for domestic and export markets since they may have to produce under different standards for each and the good or service may be subject to testing at both origin and destination. These costs are further increased if different trading partners themselves impose different requirements. The problem is aggravated by differences that also exist in national regulations. Moreover, standards bodies in most Southern African countries often also carry out conformity assessment and run their own laboratories. This can create (at least perceived) conflicts of interest with frequent allegations from the private sector that testing requirements for technical regulations are set in such a way that the laboratories are guaranteed business. Within Southern Africa, the regulatory function has been split for just one country – South Africa – and this only very recently. Other non-tariff barriers restrict opportunities for regional sourcing. Other barriers such as trade permits, export taxes, import licenses and bans also persist. Shoprite, for example, spends US$20,000 per week on securing import permits to distribute meat, milk and plant-based goods to its stores in Zambia alone. For all countries it operates in, about 100 (single entry) import permits are applied for every week; this can rise up to 300 per week in peak periods. Lack of coordination across Government Ministries and regulatory authorities also causes significant delays, particularly in authorizing trade for new products. In SACU, national protection for infant industries has often been used to justify import bans. Seasonal import bans on maize, maize meal, wheat and wheat flour ensure that domestic production is consumed first. Swaziland‘s imports of wheat flour were effectively prohibited for half of 2009 because no import permits were issued for six months of that year. Export taxes also impose costs and inhibit the development of regional supply chains. The Trade Policy Agenda: A Summary of Options Even though Botswana does not unilaterally control its trade policy because of its membership in SACU, the government can take steps that will over the long run markedly shift incentives in favor of greater competitiveness. Measures therefore can be categorized into action that Botswana itself can take immediately and unilaterally and those it should take as part of the new SACU and other regional trade arrangements. Unilateral Policies • Create capacity within Ministry of Trade – in data and technical skills -- to advocate effectively for trade policies in Botswana’s interest. At present, the Ministry lacks the information and skill profile to analyze the impacts of any change in the tariff structure or NTBs. This requires assembling existing data, collecting new data (for example on services or FDI), and employing economists trained in tariff and NTB analysis. This would enable staff to write short policy briefs and help the Minister and the Economic Cabinet define policy positions. • Conduct a full evaluation of the costs and benefits of any new proposed trade measure, examining the impact on consumers and competitiveness as well as on producers. This obviously presupposes that new efforts at data gathering and technical capacity are undertaken. 68 • Remove core NTBs by continuing to improve cumbersome customs procedures, revamp import and export licensing, quota arrangements, and unnecessary import prohibitions. Another priority is to undertake a detailed review of all import permits, with a view to removing this requirement for all but a limited number of commodities for security, public health and public morality reasons. Government could review the Control of Goods, Services and Other Charges Act, possibly applying a costs and benefits approach to assess whether a reduced scope for the Act is beneficial. • Adopting a phased program to remove the bans on poultry, eggs, beef, imported bread, flour and sugar as well as seasonal bans on horticultural products. • Services trade: Review services restrictions with a view to greater liberalization to spur competition, lower costs and increase exports. Restrictions raise costs to downstream users and detract from Botswana’s ability to compete. A comprehensive review would provide oversight to the Ministry and Economic Cabinet of actions needed across the board to improve competitiveness. • Professional services: Reduce cumulative entry requirements on the establishment of foreign firms (mode 3), particularly in accountancy and law, and reduce restrictions on conduct that impede competition, including fixing prices, restrictions on business organization, and advertising; and remove explicit barriers to the movement of professionals (mode 4), such as labor market tests, nationality requirements, and work permits – starting first with SACU/SADC professionals, with a view to expanding to the world. SACU, SADC, TRIPARTITE, and EPAs: • Tariff policy: Advocate for (a) reductions in the common external MFN tariff, especially those most prejudicial to Botswana producers, including tariff peaks and tariffs on intermediate inputs; (b) a simplified tariff system with only 3-6 low-rate bands. Botswana is given new standing within SACU decision-making on tariffs. At present, the tariff system undermines Botswana competitiveness by taxing its consumers and producers. Modifying the tariff system through a combination of a phased program to reduce tariff peaks in conjunction with a program of labor market assistance to aid dislocated workers could spur Botswana diversification. • Propose SACU-wide limitations on the use of local content requirements that restrict the ability of other SACU members to trade with their SACU neighbors. • Rules of origin: Propose changes in rules of origin that would allow exporters to choose between either a change of tariff heading or low value added content rule; propose elimination of all product- and process-specific rules of origin, and remove requirements for certification of products with preference margins of less than 3%; propose that COMESA-SADC allow transportation costs to be included in any value-added assessment (or simple methods used in NAFTA - e.g., a build down method assessing regional value added in final value or a build up method assessing regional originating materials – could be used). • Harmonizing standards and adopting mutual/regional recognition (e.g. approval of seeds, licensing of chemicals and pharmaceuticals). • Advocate within SACU and SADC for the creation of a knowledge platform to produce and disseminate information on restrictions, address knowledge gaps such as regulatory impact assessments, and address political economy constraints through dialogue among policy makers in the region to remove barriers to competition. This could be a first step 69 toward pursuing services liberalization with EU and SADC partners through trade negotiations, with the aim of making Botswana a growing provider of niche services within the region. 70 Chapter 4: Reducing the Costs of Key Backbone Services One of the essential, commonly-found, ingredients for a successful diversification strategy is the reduction of the costs of production in the new traded sectors to help to spur efficiency and encourage entry. This chapter looks at the costs of some key services sectors that, while they may represent growth sectors in their own right, also constitute important inputs into the production of other traded goods and services. It shows how state monopolies and regulatory restrictions have driven up the costs of telecommunications and air transport. A Reformed ICT Sector for Competitiveness and Diversification in Botswana Botswana was once considered a star ICT performer among developing countries. It was one of the first African countries to establish an independent regulatory agency – currently, the Botswana Telecommunication Authority (BTA) – and also introduced mobile network competition and a fiber-optic backbone network earlier than many developed countries. Expectations were high in the mid-1990s regarding the contribution that the ICT (information and communications technology) sector would make to economic growth and diversification in Botswana, at the time when the first submarine cable had landed in South Africa and both privatization and market liberalization were on the policy agenda. Today, almost two decades later, sector reform is incomplete and privatization is still pending while other regions of Africa are now better supplied by undersea cables. Since 2006, Botswana has fallen 24 spots in the World Economic Forum’s Network Readiness Index and currently resides at 91st globally. Botswana has failed to press ahead with additional reforms, and is falling behind other countries in terms of growth rate, prices and the contribution of ICTs as a driver of innovation. The price and quality of Internet service is uncompetitive and uptake, at 6 percent, is low. The figure drops further for broadband service, to 0.6 percent. The fading ICT star in Botswana is less a result of absolute decline, but rather is due to slower policy reform, and a lower level of international openness, compared with its peers. If Botswana is to become an internationally as well as regionally competitive economy, it needs to consistently outperform, especially in ICT. Yet Botswana underperforms in the international rankings. Botswana is ranked 109th in the International Telecommunication Union’s (ITU) ICT Development Index which ranks countries based on their citizens’ ICT access, use and skills; it is standing still relative to other countries such as Kenya and Rwanda, which may soon overtake it in the rankings (Table 7). Similarly, in terms of broadband competitiveness, a critical indicator is the speed of connectivity. According to NetIndex (June 2012)25, Botswana ranks only 164th globally and 20th in Africa. Its average download speed of 1.31 Mbit/s compares unfavorably with rising African stars such as Kenya (4.4 Mbit/s) and also with near neighbors such as Angola (4.4 Mbit/s), South Africa (3.2 Mbit/s) and Zimbabwe (2.6 Mbit/s). Without fast broadband, companies in high-tech sectors (such as software development), and data intensive sectors, such as diamond trading, will stay away. Today, Botswana’s ICT infrastructure is not sufficient for applications that would require a high bandwidth for data transfer. This undoubtedly hobbles the country’s efforts to compete and diversify. For manufacturing, while the telecoms costs may generally not be a major input, in some areas, including in the cutting of diamonds, high bandwidth is required to send cut designs to parent companies. 25 www.netindex.com 71 For service sectors such as consultancy, tourism and financial services, and of course Business Process Outsourcing (BPO) this is a more significant cost item, and affordable broadband services are a driver of innovation (World Bank, 2012). The challenge is to create an open and competitive, market-based infrastructure, with prices low enough for experimentation & innovation and broad access. Table 7: Ranking 2010 ranks and changes in ITU ICT Development Index (2008-2010) Botswana (109) Kenya (115) Rwanda (142) South Africa (97) Access +3 (103) +6 +1 -5 Use +1 (118) +19 +8 +1 Skills +1 (105) -1 +6 +1 High prices are in part to blame for this decline. In the ITU price basket, Botswana has fallen 22 spots since 2008, to 85th globally. In the ITU IDI (Table 1), Botswana’s global ranking in Usage (118th) is much lower than either Access (103rd) or its Skills base (105th) suggesting that high prices are deterring higher levels of ICT usage. In two different rankings of the price of mobile network usage in Africa (OECD, 2011 and Research ICT Africa Fair Mobile Price Rankings, 2012), Botswana is a poor performer, and relative to its SADC neighbors, Botswana mobile rates are particularly high. (Figure 1) Figure 1: Mobile cellular prepaid – price of local call per minute (peak, off-net) (US$)26 The high cost of ICT in Botswana is most pronounced for broadband Internet. Most individuals in the developing world will access the Internet primarily through mobile phones, but in Botswana, the cost of accessing 1 GB of data per month on a mobile device is prohibitively high at US$ 229 per Gbit/s for prepaid subscribers in October 2011, more than 20 times higher than in Kenya (Figure 2). One reason for the high prices for retail bandwidth is that the suppliers of this bandwidth – Internet Service Providers – are themselves paying very high wholesale prices. A dedicated 155 Mbit/s connection from Johannesburg to London cost around $34,000 per month in July 2011. The backhaul from Gaborone to Johannesburg costs a further $40,000 per month, essentially doubling the cost of doing business (Figure 3). In other countries, fixed broadband prices have been declining much faster than in Botswana, allowing them to become attractive locations for doing business (Table 8). The result is that Botswana is underperforming in ICT relative to its peers (Figure 4) and to its wealth. 26 Annex chart data are from the ITU (June 2011). 72 80,000 Botswana 70,000 $227.79 60,000 Zimbabwe $90.00 BW - 50,000 Jo'bur Malawi $62.71 40,000 g South Africa 30,000 $39.68 20,000 Jo'bur Namibia $35.69 10,000 g- London Mauritius $18.62 - Cairo - New York - London - BW-JNB - Kenya $10.76 London Sao Paolo Mumbai London Source: ICT data.org (righ chart); TeleGeography Inc., Focus Group participants (left chart) Note: Left chart based on pre-paid tariffs. Botswana’s post-paid tariff in Oct 2011 was US$49.96 per month per Gbit/s. Figure 2: Cost for 1 GB/Month in USD Figure 3: Cost for a dedicated 155 Mbit/s (Oct. 2011) connection over different routes, in USD (July. 2011) Country Percent Change Burkina Faso -96% Uganda -90% Kenya -77% Malawi -51% Swaziland -47% Botswana -13% Source: ITU Measuring the Information Society 2011 Table 8: Change in Price of Fixed Broadband (2008-2010) Source: ITU Measuring the Information Society (2011) Figure 4: Relationship between ITU Development Index, 2010 and GNI per capita, 2009 73 Main Challenges Botswana faces a number of structural challenges to delivering high quality, well-priced ICT services. It is a landlocked country, with low population density (outside Gaborone) which has made it difficult to achieve economies of scale in telecommunications infrastructure. Historically, most of Botswana’s international traffic transited through South Africa and the unequal bargaining positions meant that most of the benefits from international traffic (such as settlement fees for incoming voice calls) were pocketed by the South African incumbent (Telkom) while the costs (such as expensive prices for transit and backhaul) were passed onto Botswana Telecom Corporation (BTC) and its customers. The uncompetitive and inefficient nature of the South African market for broadband connectivity is passed onto Botswana in terms of higher prices for international Internet bandwidth (see Figure 4 for an illustration of the telecoms supply chain). However, the situation is changing with the arrival of the EASSy (in December 2010) and WACS (which was due to come on-stream in May 2012) undersea cables in which Botswana has invested. In the case of the EASSy cable, backhaul still has to take place through South Africa). The greater capacity of these new cable systems, as well as the diversified routing arrangements, should bring greater competition to the market for international broadband connectivity. This is literally a “sea-change� – pun intended – opportunity for Botswana’s international price competitiveness. Yet even as international connectivity improves, progress on introducing competition in ICT in Botswana has lagged, and policy bottlenecks remain. The underlying reason for Botswana’s disappointing ICT performance is the misplaced protectionism of the fixed-line incumbent operator, the Botswana Telecommunications Corporation (BTC), which has hampered competitive behavior in the Internet segment of the market. The BTC has an effective monopoly on the fixed-line network, including the local loop, national backbone, and international gateway. This lack of competitive dynamic, and the standstill over the restructuring of the sector, is very much at the root of high prices and limited sector innovation. Given huge fiber capacity, which in essence eliminates limitations to supply, it is market structure that defines pricing in the ICT sector, not the cost of service supply. Infrastructure without competition will not deliver results. Thus, although the high cost of ICT in Botswana is most pronounced for broadband Internet (switching/routing, access and retail services segments generally have low barriers to entry), it will be necessary also to address the competitive structure in international connectivity, regional connectivity, switching/routing, xDSL/cable networks, and retail services as well as the domestic backbone. 74 Figure 5: The broadband supply chain (holds for telecoms generally) While government plans to sell 49 percent of BTC (see Box 1), this will not, on its own, be a panacea for ensuring competition within the various segments of the business nor for the deeper structural problems that Botswana faces. Unless the restructuring of BTC ensures competition in the segments under its control, costs to users are not likely to fall, nor services to improve.27 For instance, as BTC has not made broadband capacity available to competing operators, prices have remained high. Liberalization of the local loop, or local loop unbundling, would be one way of promoting competition among operators28. The lack of local loop unbundling or open access to the backbone also impedes competing service providers from managing the relationship with the end user, which is essential for price bundling and creative discounting. In terms of promoting competition in the domestic backbone, infrastructure competition is the most effective means of doing this. Regulation of backbone networks has had limited success around the world. Competition is viable at some level in many segments of the international and domestic backbone infrastructure. If government supports competition through providing easy access rights of way, alternative infrastructure (e.g. railways) and through direct support to passive infrastructure, infrastructure competition will develop (nevertheless, full infrastructure competition will not be possible in all areas of the country, nor in all segments of the market). Regulated access to BTC’s infrastructure is the second-best solution where competition is not yet effective. Regulation is always difficult because of asymmetries in information and skills between operators and the regulator. 27 Moreover, the proposed approach – of keeping the main backbone network in state hands – may deter private infrastructure providers, such as Liquid Telecom or Dark Fibre Africa, from investing, because it is never a good idea to compete against the government. Furthermore, as noted above, it is the demand side of the equation, rather than the supply side, which is lacking. Even with the best will in the world, government bureaucrats tend not to be as good in stimulating demand as private companies. 28 Local loop unbundling refers to allowing multiple telecommunications operators to use connections from the telephone exchange to the customers’ premises. The physical wire connection between the local exchange and the customer is known as a "local loop", and is owned by the ‘BTC. To increase competition, other providers are granted unbundled access. 75 Box 1: BTC Restructuring Preparations are underway for the restructuring and privatization of BTC in 2013; the approach selected for this, however, is a risky one. The objective of the privatization and restructuring is to extend competition in some parts of the ICT value chain. In Botswana, the main need is to enhance competition on the backbone and local loop (Williams et al, 2011). At the moment, Botswana is planning to restructure by divorcing BTC’s service provision arm (which covers the fixed-line voice network, the internet service provider, Botsnet, and the mobile entrant, BeMobile) from its network infrastructure assets. A special purpose vehicle (SPV) would be set up to own the network and would continue to have an effective monopoly over the state-financed network assets, but would rent them to competing service providers at competitive rates. The approach is known as structural (or, physical) separation, but is relatively rarely used. Most regulators opt for a policy of functional separation, whereby the incumbent remains one legal entity, but the infrastructure and retail business lines and staff are disconnected,1. The latter approach is typically favored because structural separation is a riskier proposition due to the challenges of divestiture and the lengthy process of establishing efficient new businesses.1 Table 8 below summarizes some of the advantages and disadvantages of the two approaches. Table 8: Physical versus functional separation of an incumbent’s network and services Reform approach Advantages Disadvantages Physical separation: that is, network • Relatively “clean� break that may be • Relatively untried, and where it has of incumbent hived off to a separate conceptually easier to grasp been tried, has often proved company from its services unsuccessful • Allows government to continue to own and invest in infrastructure if it • Difficult to implement and regulate and chooses to do so may lead to long drawn out process, especially if incumbent seeks compensation for loss of assets • Loss of corporate knowledge between network and services arm may lead to operational difficulties • Network operator usually continues as a monopoly which may not bring desired efficiency gains Functional separation: that is, • Well understood and widely • Access price for network assets may be establishing accounting separation practiced policy, with many best set too high (reducing incentives for between wholesale and retail arms of practice examples to follow market entry) or too low (reducing incumbent incentives for continued investment) • Relatively easy to regulate in that all parties have an interest in setting a • Incumbent’s dominant position in the sustainable price for access to market may not be challenged network assets • Incumbent may find other ways to • Usually associated with unbundling cross-subsidize its retail arm from its of local loop to allow competing wholesale arm, for instance through service providers to access network “creative accounting�. assets at the same price as retail arm of incumbent • Allows for infrastructure competition with new market entrants making rational decisions over whether to build or buy their infrastructure 76 Recommendations to increase competition in Botswana’s telecoms services Policy needs to address all aspects of the broadband supply chain: international, national, access networks, and retail services. In terms of international connectivity, low-cost, high capacity international bandwidth is needed; this is being achieved with the EASSy and WACS cables, although regional connectivity between submarine cables and the border is still costly. At the national level, multiple backbone networks, with competition to ensure low costs, are essential. Access networks should include a combination of both fixed and wireless, and in the provision of retail services, competition, diversity and innovation are key. More specifically, there is a need to: - Move transparently and swiftly with the restructuring of the sector, focusing on the introduction of competition to the various segments of the business by: o Unbundling local loop. In mature markets, separation should be associated with local loop unbundling (LLU) whereby the copper lines that connect the customer to the exchange can be “rented out� by competitors at a wholesale price that allows them to compete with the retail service prices of the incumbent, for instance to provide broadband internet. o Ensuring open access to the backbone for service provides. The fiber-optic backbone can be similarly made competitive through a policy of open access to the backbone for service providers. Separation of BTC’s assets can be backed up with opening up the market for infrastructural competition, allowing competing mobile operators and ISPs to make rational “build or buy� decisions. This would allow large companies, such as mining companies, to self-provide networks and services where this is a more cost-effective choice. o Continue diversifying international connectivity. Access to additional international submarine cables will help to reduce prices through increased competition, and the effort should be continued. - Reducing costs of regional connectivity by negotiating “virtual coastline� agreements. Virtual coastline agreements would help to avoid neighbors’ uncompetitive infrastructure policies and pricing on regional connectivity (i.e. the connection from the border to submarine cables). This would allow Botswana to bypass the commercial markets for backhaul connectivity from the submarine cables to its territory. This can be initiated through SADC and the Communication Regulators’ Association of Southern Africa (CRASA). - Improving access to reliable pricing data. In regulating this competitive access, it is important to have reliable pricing data. This should be based on international benchmarking and cost modeling. In February 2011, the BTA issued a price directive for wholesale prices by BTC, setting price caps on how much can be charged to users and competing service providers. This was a positive step. However, the analysis was based on a cost modeling exercise, rather than on international price benchmarking, and therefore is entirely dependent on data supplied by BTC itself. - Considering functional – rather than physical – separation of BTC’s network & service divisions. 77 Air Transport and Diversification in Botswana Minimal competition, poor connectivity, and high fares characterize the air transport sector in Botswana. While Botswana has taken steps to attract long-haul flights to Gaborone in recent years and has signed a number of bilateral air service agreements, the protection in the air transport sector remains basically unchanged. Air Botswana, a state-owned entity and sole designated national flag carrier, is the only carrier permitted to operate scheduled domestic services in the country. There is very little competition on international routes. Policies do not facilitate international access to the country. Gaborone has one of the lowest levels of aviation connectivity between capital cities anywhere in the world.29 Policy-induced limitations are exacerbated by the small volume of air transport in Botswana, with just under 790,000 passengers in 2011. Tourism, financial and professional services, the newly expanded diamond trading activities and other economic sectors that depend on reliable and affordable air transport services are hurt by the current state of the sector. Sector Background The air transport sector in Botswana is small, although new international routes have been added and seat availability on these routes has nearly doubled over the past three years. There are six international airports and numerous domestic airstrips in the country. Air Botswana dominates the sector and is the sole operator of scheduled domestic flights. Its domestic services operate mainly out of Gaborone, Francistown, Maun and Kasane. Several other air transport operators are involved in domestic charter operations usually offering their air transport services as part of tourist packages. Air Botswana also operates multiple daily services mainly between Gaborone- Johannesburg and Maun-Johannesburg. In addition, four foreign air carriers operate scheduled passenger services to destinations in Botswana: Kenya Airways, South African Express Airways and British Airways (operated by Comair), operating at Gaborone's Sir Seretse Khama International Airport (SSKIA), and Air Namibia operating at Maun international airport. New services were introduced from Gaborone to Lusaka (LUN) by Air Botswana in 2010 and to Nairobi (NBO) (via Harare) also by Air Botswana under a code sharing arrangement with Kenya Airways.30 A total of 381,373 international and 364,982 domestic passenger movements were recorded in Botswana during the 2010-2011 financial year (April 2010 –March 2011), split between the country's six major airports as shown in Figure 7. The number of total available seats on international routes nearly doubled between 2008 and 2011, mainly attributable to increases in international flights at SSKIA and Maun. 29 Botswana is ranked 159 among 211 countries in the Air Connectivity Index developed by the World Bank. 30 In spite of the code sharing arrangement between Air Botswana and Kenya Airways on the Gaborone-Harare-Nairobi route, Kenya th Airways does not have 5 Freedom traffic rights on the Gaborone – Harare segment of the route. As such, Kenya Airways does not have permission to carry traffic originating from Harare to Gaborone on its inbound flight and traffic originating from Gaborone to Harare on its outbound flight. 78 Figure 6: Air Transport Network Connectivity in Botswana International Passenger Domestic Passenger Airport Movements Movements SSKIAGaborone (GBE) 307,421 102,539 Maun (MUB) 44,330 163,380 Kasane (BBK) 18,984 56,448 Francistown (FRW) 9886 41,709 Selibe-Phikwe (PKW) 673 523 Ghanzi (GNZ) 79 383 Total 381,373 364,982 Figure 7: International and Domestic Passenger Movements at Botswana's Major Airports (2010- 2011) Challenges Despite new routes and increased seat availability, international connectivity remains poor and there is only very limited competition on international routes. Johannesburg is the main gateway into Botswana, accounting for about 75% of all scheduled traffic. Currently, the only international route on which there is some competition is the Gaborone – Johannesburg route where Air Botswana competes with South African Express (SAE). Botswana has not granted 5th freedom rights31 as part of its bilateral agreement with other countries. A recent positive development is that, after years of negotiation, SAE will also begin to fly the profitable Johannesburg-Maun tourist route in June 2012, with Air Botswana introducing a Maun-Cape Town flight. Maun is the tourist gateway to northern Botswana and the Okavango. Fares are high as a result: the Johannesburg-Maun fare is upward of US$500, while the Cape Town-Maun fare is on the order of $650.32 31 Fifth freedom right is the right to carry passengers from one's own country to a second country, and from that country to a third country. 32 In the tourism sector, while hospitality, communication, entertainment and entrance costs are largely market related, transportation is a large cost item that has a major influence on the cost of a holiday to Botswana. The high flight costs between South Africa and Botswana add substantially to the overall cost of a visit as these costs are in addition to the overseas flight leg. The successful 79 Air Botswana is the only operator permitted to conduct scheduled domestic flights. Numerous other domestic operators engaged mainly in charter operations offer flights as part of tourist packages. Under the Air Botswana Act of 1988, the Minister of Works Transport and Communications may by notice published in the Gazette award Air Botswana an exclusive concession as the national air carrier for the operation of scheduled domestic and international air transport services for such period as the Minister may determine. In line with this provision, Air Botswana has been granted a de facto monopoly within the scheduled domestic air transport market. 33 Cabotage (the transport of goods or passengers between two points in the same country by an aircraft registered in another country) is expressly not permitted in Botswana.34 Air Botswana receives significant government subsidies to cover its net losses, in addition to the de facto monopoly it enjoys over scheduled domestic operations as well as protection from free and open international competition. An effort was made to privatize the company in the mid- 2000s, but the effort has since failed and from all indications, it is no longer being pursued as an option by the Government of Botswana. In spite of its de facto monopoly over domestic scheduled services, Air Botswana is currently only able to provide scheduled services between a total of 4 airports: Gaborone – Maun (10 flights per week); Gaborone – Francistown (9 flights per week); Gaborone – Kasane (5 flights per week); and, Maun – Kasane (3 flights per week). There is no clear framework for regulatory oversight of airport and air navigation services. The Civil Aviation Authority of Botswana (CAAB), which began operations in 2009, is responsible for providing regulatory, operational and economic oversight of air transport sector. In addition to being the regulator of the air transport sector, the mandate of CAAB includes control of and operation of all the airports in Botswana, as well as promoting the safety, security, efficiency and regularity of civil aviation. The CAAB also provides air navigation services in Botswana. While these mandates are performed by different divisions within CAAB, there is apparently no clear separation between the role of the CAAB as an independent regulator of the air transport sector and its role as a service provider within the industry (i.e., as airport and air navigations services provider). Policy Recommendations - Efforts to further liberalize the air transport sector are essential if the air transport sector is to make a meaningful contribution to competitiveness and diversification in Botswana. Long- standing international air transport restrictions imposed by the Government of Botswana in its bilateral air transport agreements need to be reviewed in line with the obligations assumed by the government under the Yamoussoukro Decision. Among other things, this calls for the liberalization of passenger and cargo services, including the exchange of 5th Freedom air traffic rights among member states. - The government should consider adopting a more flexible bilateral air transport policy, including the option of granting liberal 5th Freedom traffic – including to nations who may not be party to the Yamoussoukro Decision. This would encourage the re-establishment by foreign international carriers of direct long-haul connections between destinations in Botswana and other foreign destinations (or stopovers in Botswana on long-haul flights to other destinations). Given Botswana’s small population and an equally small number of diversification of tourism towards the lesser frequented tourism areas of the Central Kalahari, the Western Delta, the Pans and the Kgalagadi would be substantially enhanced through affordable and easy air access. 33 In a recent development in the domestic market, the CAAB invited domestic operators to submit expressions of interest to be licensed for the conduct of scheduled domestic operations. If this is carried through as announced, Air Botswana's monopoly over domestic scheduled services in Botswana will end. This would provide the opportunity for opening up the domestic air transport sector to competition. 34 This is despite the fact that Botswana, being a party to the Yamoussoukro Decision – a pan-African treaty – , is obliged to liberalize its air transport markets, including their domestic air transport markets on a multilateral basis. 80 international passenger movements (including traffic derived from tourism), an analysis of traffic trends based on origin and destination (O&D) traffic would not support the launching of direct flights to Botswana by an international operator unless liberal 5th Freedom traffic rights are factored into the equation. - A clear separation of the CAAB’s role as regulator of the air transport sector from its role as a service provider is necessary, also in view of international standards. The operation of airports and the provision of air navigation services in Botswana for instance should not fall under the mandate of the CAAB. The CAAB's mandate should be limited to licensing, monitoring and maintaining oversight of service providers. Further, the capacity of the CAAB to perform the role of safety, operational and economic regulator of the air transport sector requires enhancement. For instance, given Air Botswana's dominance as the sole domestic scheduled carrier, and the fact that applications by operators to be licensed for scheduled domestic operations may not be routine, consideration may be given to outsourcing some of these functions or seeking assistance from countries with more established and experienced Civil Aviation Authorities until such a time that in-house capacity at CAAB has been built to the desired level. Beyond initial licensing of operators, the CAAB needs to be appropriately equipped, both in terms of staffing and logistics, to perform ongoing monitoring of operators for compliance with applicable safety and operational regulations. Recent accidents involving two non-scheduled domestic operators suggest that regulatory oversight over such operations may not be up to par. - Commercial considerations should play an important role in determining the viability and continued sustainability of the operations of Air Botswana. As long as the operations of Air Botswana continue to be underwritten or subsidized by the government, the carrier will not strive to become commercially efficient or to provide the desired level of service and air transport connectivity in Botswana. Although the scope of Air Botswana’s mandate extends beyond maintaining commercial operations to linking rural communities, its de facto monopoly over the scheduled segment of the domestic market has not served the economy very well - Opening up cabotage to “on demand�(say charter) services is an option to consider in order to stimulate domestic competition. The introduction of rigorous competition into the scheduled segment of the domestic air transport market will not only be in fulfillment of the government's international obligations but will also be beneficial to the economy at large. Competition will increase the availability of services and the number of destinations served and will also drive down prices, thereby boosting demand for domestic air transport services and reducing costs in other sectors. In this regard, the recent call made by the CAAB to domestic operators to submit expressions of interest for scheduled operations is a welcome initiative. Again, if competition is to be successfully established and implemented, then the CAAB must be equipped to perform the role of antitrust regulator. - In the longer term, a hub development strategy could be examined. Presently, capacity (in terms of slots) is saturated at Johannesburg's O.R. Tambo International Airport the main international gateway to southern Africa. With regular, reliable connections to most of major SADC cities, a regional hub in Botswana would boost traffic movements in Botswana and facilitate the establishment of long haul operations by established foreign carriers. An effective regional hub would, however, require at least one strong regional carrier to feed traffic from the region into the hub and also to distribute traffic arriving at the hub into the region. The government should allow free competition and market discipline to determine which operator(s) are allowed to perform this role. 81 Road Transport: From Landlocked to Regional Hub? Transport and logistics is an area that has been identified as particularly critical to Botswana’s development. The country’s geographical position at the center of SADC represents a source of potential competitive advantage; but equally its landlocked position and lack of market scale raises transport costs significantly. Thus, efficiency in transport and logistics is critical to support the competitiveness and export potential of the country’s agricultural, mining, and industrial sectors. Recognizing this, Botswana is considering developing and positioning itself as a base for regional transport and logistics activities, organized around world-class, multi-modal cargo hub infrastructure and supported by an efficient operating and enabling environment. This section evaluates Botswana’s strengths and weaknesses in this respect, and more broadly, outlines some of the major challenges that need to be overcome in order to harness transport and logistics in the service of the country’s competitiveness and diversification agenda. Sector Background Botswana ranks among the least competitive countries in measures of transport and logistics, coming in at 150 out of 183 countries in Doing Business’ Trading Across Borders indicator (2012). Transport costs for exporters in Botswana are among the highest in the world, in turn raising the costs for all producers importing inputs, and for all consumers. Botswana is only four hours by road to Johannesburg, and nine hours to the Port of Durban. However its high transport costs are usually noted as a major constraint for the competitiveness of its non-diamond exports. Inland transport constitutes an estimated 60 percent of total transport costs in Botswana: the average cost to transport a 40ft container to Durban from Gaborone, for example, is roughly equivalent to shipping the same container from Durban to Baltimore. In addition, Botswana’s landlocked condition makes it particularly vulnerable to logistic inefficiencies, cross border charges and other costs. When such costs – for documents, administrative fees, customs broker fees, etc. - are added to inland transport costs, exporting from Botswana costs about 54 percent higher than for the Sub-Saharan average, while import costs are approximately 36 percent higher than the average in Sub-Saharan Africa. Clearly, transport costs are a matter of concern for competitiveness and prospects for diversification. With the exception of cabotage laws (see below), the domestic road transport market in Botswana appears to be open, with no major policy restrictions to new entry among the commercially established operators - with the exception of passenger transport which is restricted to citizen- owned enterprises. It is relatively easy to enter the market, either as a foreigner or a local. For citizens in particular, access to finance does not appear to be a major constraint to entry, and with the ability to import second hand trucks into the country, entry barriers are lower than in South Africa (where there is an import ban on second hand vehicles). It takes only one day to process a license for freight operations and a similar timeframe for a special cargo license. Transport services are dominated by South African companies. (Kgare, 2011) The demand for road transport services is fairly limited, however.35 Non-minerals cargo amounts to less than 200 truckloads per day across the entire country; 85 percent of this cargo is domestic, and only 15 percent represents import or export movements. Botswana’s land freight flows can be divided into three broad categories: local cargo movement, representing freight moving within the country; imports and exports, (road and rail) which is freight that originates in Botswana and is exported regionally or internationally, and freight that is imported into Botswana; and regional transit (road and rail), or freight that is passing through the country in transit from one country in the region to another. There is limited data on local cargo movements, which are roughly estimated at 2-2.5 million tons consisting mostly of coal, cement, salt, bulk fuels and consumer goods. Imports and exports total about 3.9 million tons, with about 80 percent being imports, 20 percent exports. Less than six percent of this trade is beyond the region, and the bulk of it is with South Africa (80 percent). Minerals, building materials, and agricultural goods constitute the 35 97 percent of freight in Botswana is transported by road, with only 3 percent carried by rail. 82 bulk of these flows. A number of planned activities in the country could contribute to increased import and export volumes in the medium term include new agricultural and mining projects, as would a revival of the beef and apparel sectors, although the contribution would likely be limited to an increase in volumes on the order of 5 percent. A basic structural disadvantage, which further exacerbates the overall cost of trading, is that this freight market is characterized by stark imbalances in two-way traffic, with a large trade deficit in favor of South Africa, pushing overall delivery prices up because trucks are returning empty and cannot make onward deliveries because of restrictive cabotage rules (see below). Some freight export shipments are delayed for a few days because the low volume of shipments from Botswana is often insufficient to occupy whole trucks, requiring goods to wait until they can be grouped. As for regional traffic (both rail and road) transiting through Botswana, this currently amounts to about 800,000 tons, and represents about ten percent of the regional total, with the largest movements flowing between South Africa and Zambia (20 percent of this transit traffic flows through Botswana) and South Africa and Namibia about 6 percent). This share could be increased – perhaps to 50 percent of the Beitbridge traffic – by the development of the Kazungula bridge where delays at the ferry today discourage northward flows through Botswana. Increased use of Walvis Bay over Durban and Richard’s Bay ports in South Africa would also raise Botswana’s share of transit flows. (Kaiser, 2007) Forecasts of medium-term freight growth by Kaiser Associates estimate that by 2020, total freight movements (road and rail) may fall between 18 and 28 million tons. By comparison, the current freight volume in South Africa is 170 times this. Considering the opportunities for developing a transport hub in the country, removing commodities (which represent approximately 80 percent of volumes) and assuming that a hub would capture 10 percent of remaining volumes, it would handle about 18 truckloads per day, increasing to 50 trucks by 2020. Opportunities for Botswana as a hub are therefore most likely to be in specialist or niche areas, including sectors where production is concentrated in the north of the region, such mining and some aspects of agriculture, and in logistics services whose customer base is spread evenly across the region. Box X: Rail Infrastructure Botswana’s railways consist of a single main line of 6,041 km. There are three short branch-lines. This links to South African railway to the South and Zimbabwean railway to the North East. The railway is maintained and operated by Botswana Railways which is a 100 percent Government-owned parastatal. Freight traffic is volatile, with a generally downward trend, largely due to increasing competition from road traffic, and because of the Beit Bridge to Bulawayo rail link between South Africa and is some 200 km shorter than the route via Botswana. The main exports that rely on railway transport is soda-ash and raw materials for the apparel sector, although plans to massively increase coal exports would imply the need to invest heavily in rail links. Freight companies still complain that railways are less reliable than road transport, giving inexact estimated delivery times with a 2 day variability. Trips to Durban from Gaborone take between 4 to 7 days, compared to 1-2 days by truck. (World Bank, 2005). A well-developed logistics sector is a critical ingredient to the attainment of Botswana’s vision in the transport sector. Today, the logistics sector in the country is small, with heavy involvement of the informal sector. Many of the major regional and international logistics companies have already established operations in the country: here are 33 major firms, highly concentrated in Gaborone. None of the major International Logistics Integrators or fourth party (4PL) logistics companies are represented in Botswana, however. The sector is currently under-developed, characterized by price-based competition, and with an informal segment of the sector undercutting “legitimate� providers. There appears to be a high incidence of overloading and a lack of value-added activities. The lack of substantial freight volumes outside mining and construction, combined with the imbalances noted above in two-way traffic are some of the structural factors limiting the development of the sector. Other factors that limit growth of logistics in Botswana are the lack of its recognition as a formal, professional industry; the high cost of vehicle permits and the bureaucracy involved in obtaining them, as well as the difficulty the sector faces in bringing in foreign skills. (Farole, 2011) 83 Challenges Botswana possesses a number of advantages supporting its goals of capturing a greater share of regional transit traffic as well as improving its position as a transport hub. These include geographical location – Botswana is centrally located in the region for cargo movements – and access to markets (SACU and SADC), as well as relatively high quality transport infrastructure. At the same time, a number of challenges – some structural – hinder the attainment of these goals. Transport costs are raised by Botswana’s landlocked situation, and by the size and low population densities in the country. Imbalances in trade are another structural disadvantage, with small size and limited non-traditional exports meaning that most freight leaves Botswana empty. Volumes are small, and South Africa’s economic and population dominance in Southern Africa increases its relative attractiveness as a hub location. Other challenges, however, can be addressed in the near-to-medium term. These include some weaknesses in transport infrastructure and in trade facilitation, whose resolution would contribute to increasing volumes and reducing transport costs. In terms of freight transport infrastructure, the underutilization of the Trans-Kalahari Corridor reduces volumes transiting through Botswana. The construction of the Kazungula Bridge is a priority for improved links to the northern part of the region; this should include a rail link (not only road). In order to increase the fleet size, partnerships with international logistics and trucking companies can be supported. Generally, a lack of sufficient rail coverage, with border-to-border connections north-south and east-west are lacking. In the longer term, efforts to identify and implement, with neighboring countries, feasible rail option will have to continue. Also in the longer term, the development of a dry port at Walvis Bay can be pursued to benefit from a closer location to shipping companies. Looking forward, increased loads also come with increased maintenance needs, and proper cost recovery mechanisms, currently lacking, would therefore be needed. The current system of gross mass vehicle charges appears to be inadequate, and the feasibility of introducing a Mass Distance Charge to ensure that heavy vehicles do indeed pay as necessary is an option to consider. Trade facilitation constraints to transit traffic would also need to be addressed. Further streamlining border procedures and implementing 24 hour and one-stop border posts are priorities that have only been partially addressed (see chapter 3). Other hindrances need to be addressed within the SADC context and include third country and cabotage rules, varying load limits and allowances, varying vehicle dimensions, Third Party Insurance (with different regimes used with respect to third party liability insurance in foreign territory). The lack of harmonization of VAT across the region also results in delays at the border. Restrictive cabotage laws (common to all SADC countries) contribute to the high costs of transport in the region. Cargo carriers are not allowed to pick up loads at the delivery destination, except those destined for their originating country. For example, South African trucks delivering goods to Botswana cannot pick up produce for delivery via Walvis Bay in Namibia, nor could returning foreign-registered trucks on the Trans-Kalahari route drop off imports to Botswana and pick up a load for shipment via Durban in South Africa. Freight charges in the westerly direction to Walvis Bay are reported to be significantly higher than the easterly direction back to Botswana. This could have a high impact on overall transport costs, since the majority of trucks carrying exports from Botswana are registered in South Africa. Regulatory reform has had a significant impact on prices in other countries – for example, liberalization of the transport market in France reduced transport costs by between 20-40 percent. (World Bank, 2005; World Bank, 2011, Namibia Policy Note on Trade Logistics) 84 Load Limits in the Region Single Axle Tandem Axle Unit Tridem Axle Vehicle Steering Two Dual Four Dual Six Dual Combin two tyres tyres tyres tyres tyres tyres ation tyres SADC 8 8 10 16 18 24 24 56 Botswana 8 8 9 16 18 24 24 56 South Africa 7.7 8 9 16 18 24 24 56 Namibia 7.7 8 9 16 18 24 24 56 Zambia 8 8 10 12 18 24 24 56 Zimbabwe 8 8 10 12 18 24 24 56 Source: Farole, 2011 Vehicle Dimensions in the Region Vehicle Articulat Width Height Rigid Trailer Semi Combi ed Vehicle Length trailer nation vehicle Length length length SADC 22 18.5 2.6 4.3 12.5 12.5 N/A Botswana 22 17 2.5 4.1 12.5 12.5 12.5 South 22 18.5 2.6 4.3 12.5 12.5 N/A Africa Namibia 22 18.5 2.6 4.3 12.5 12.5 N/A Zambia 22 17 2.65 4.6 12.5 12.5 12.5 Zimbabwe 22 17 2.65 4.6 12.5 12.5 N/A Farole, 2011 In the short and medium term, and given limitations to the available skills base, foreign skills will need to be called upon to strengthen local capacity. The onerous visa and work permits regulations would need to be relaxed for this to happen. In the near and medium terms, the issuance of ad hoc work permits in specialized sectors and at various levels of responsibility would help to attract skilled workers. Allowing recruitment, of imported specialized skills, on a case-by-case basis, can be encouraged to create an environment for developing a logistics platform that attracts major, recognized, logistics players. In the longer term, a mechanism may be developed to ensure that foreign companies do contribute to the development of local skills capacity by providing training in return. (Farole, 2011) Recommendations 85 From the above, a number of recommendations to address some of the constraints facing the transport market in Botswana are made below: • Accelerate the implementation of key transport infrastructure projects, including the Kazungula Bridge and the Walvis Bay Dryport. • Accelerate implementation of 24-hour and one-stop border posts. • Apply risk-based systems for boarder clearances, including load limits, vehicle dimensions, and establishing a regional third party insurance system. • Establish a SADC consultation mechanism for VAT and customs rebate arrangements. • Harmonize load limits and other transport restrictions (GVM requirements, weighbridge calibration, driving hour restrictions) with the rest of SADC • Remove cabotage restrictions on national and regional trucking. • Improve road user charge (RUC) tariff policy. • Strengthen local capacity by bringing in foreign skills to fill the skills and capacity gap (in warehousing, distribution, logistics and trucking). Relax restrictions on visa and work permits. 86 Chapter 5: Creating New Dynamism in Traditional Sectors Beyond mining, Botswana has enjoyed important export success in the beef and tourism sector. Yet in both areas, Botswana has lost policy momentum and neither sector is contributing up to its potential towards Botswana’s efforts to compete and diversity. The beef and livestock sector is in crisis, and unless determined action to reverse the slide is taken, the continuation of beef exports may well cease in a decade or so. The growth of tourism has also declined, and Botswana is even losing shares in the SADC market. Dispelling the complacency that appears to have descended on the sector is critical to realizing sustained growth in Botswana’s tourism industry. Competitiveness and Sustainability of the Livestock and Beef Sector The Botswana beef and cattle sector is in crisis, and has been so for some time. Its contributions to GDP and exports have been in long term decline. Yet, along with tourism and mining, the sector is one in which Botswana has excelled in the past and it continues to present good opportunities for economic and trade diversification and employment. An immediate problem is that Botswana's main and most lucrative beef export market, the EU, has been lost due to failure to meet increasingly stringent health and safety standards. While Botswana may be able to regain EU access, the costs of compliance are very high, and it is not clear that the benefits of access outweigh these costs. A longer term challenge for the sector is the declining standards of technical cattle productivity, leaving ever lower beef surpluses for export. Both of these constraints are intermediated by the Botswana Meat Commission (BMC), a parastatal that suffers from poor financial and operating performance, whose future structure and operations will determine the prospects of the beef and cattle sector in the country. Background The livestock sector remains central to Botswana’s rural economy today. Although its contributions to GDP and to exports have diminished substantially since the discovery of diamonds, the sector continues to possess an important role in terms of overall employment, foreign exchange earnings, and, of course, in its contributions to diversifying the economy. As the importance of agriculture in the economy has declined, from over 40 percent of GDP around independence in 1966 to 2.1 percent in 2011, the contribution of cattle rearing, which represents about two-thirds of agricultural output, has also waned (figure 1). Most telling, however, is that even in real value terms agricultural output is no higher today than it was in the mid-1970s, an indication of the stagnation of the sector’s output over the past four decades. (Jefferis, 2005) Beef exports have also failed to maintain their contribution to the country’s total exports, which have fallen from five percent of the total in the early 1990s to between one and two percent today (figure 2). The total contribution of livestock and beef to Botswana’s GDP is therefore on the order of 2.5 percent and will not be a major engine of growth. The sector remains important to the rural economy, however, and is the main economic activity for a significant proportion of Botswana’s rural population. In 2006, 29 percent of the employed worked in agriculture (McCaig et al., 2011), and a large proportion of these would have been involved in cattle rearing. As the main form of wealth accumulation for a significant portion of the population, the cultural imprint of cattle herding remains important. High levels of protection and subsidies have removed the incentive to farm efficiently, resulting in poor productivity of the livestock and beef sector. The sector’s cultural, social and economic importance has been used to justify high levels of protection. International trade in beef and 87 cattle is prohibited, apart from BMC’s beef exports. The BMC enjoys a monopoly in the export of beef and livestock from the country. Beef imports into Botswana are banned. The lack of export competition has removed any pressures that might have existed for the BMC to operate efficiently. The BMC’s frequent annual losses are covered by the government budget, and government provides guarantees for BMC overdraft financing. Beyond the protection from export competition, the cattle sector also enjoys sizeable subsidies. The government promotes cattle-keeping through free veterinary services and subsidized loans, fences, husbandry inputs, and support in the construction of boreholes. A 2006 BIDPA study estimated that in 2002 there was an annual per breeding cow support from government of P1100.36 The high level of government support, combined with a very low level of external inputs, and favorable tax treatment where losses incurred in beef activities can be partially written off against other sources of income, producers have few incentives to financially monitor their enterprises or to be concerned about productivity parameters. There is little incentive to farm efficiently. As a result, although data are poor and scarce, productivity parameters appear to have experienced a secular decline. 140.0 6.0% 4 120.0 5.0% 3.5 3 100.0 4.0% million US$ 2.5 80.0 3.0% 2 60.0 1.5 2.0% 40.0 1 1.0% 20.0 0.5 0.0 0.0% 0 1991 1993 1995 1997 1999 2001 2003 2005 2007 2009 2011 beef exports (US$ milllion) % of total merchandise exports (rhs) Figure 1: Share of agriculture to GDP Figure 2: Trends in beef exports High levels of protection combine with poor cattle management practices. Over time, as economic growth and urbanization have advanced, the livestock husbandry system has changed from a hands-on management system with elements of transhumance to follow the grazing, into a stationary largely absentee-owner cattle post system, where herd management is left in the hands of untrained herders, and concentrated around boreholes with exclusive or shared syndicated water rights. The level of inputs is consequently extremely low. The outcome has been low and stagnating productivity, leaving ever lower surpluses for export. Range degradation has been another consequence. Larger scale commercial livestock farming has also been introduced, although these represent only a small proportion of total production, and their productivity is in many cases comparable to that of the traditional sector. To be able to compete internationally, and indeed, to remain viable, the livestock sector needs to address its internal constraints head on. Efforts have in the past been made to cut costs and improve management at the BMC, but these have not been bold enough and have not managed to revitalize the sector. The sector will not achieve its potential without significant shifts in government policy regarding trade liberalization, inputs subsidies and land use. Botswana beef is highly regarded, being largely free-range, hormone free, high quality, and enjoying potentially huge export advantages due to its of quota-free, duty free access to the lucrative European 36 Moreover, the services and inputs provided by government are difficult to target exclusively at the poorer livestock farmers, and often those who are capable of paying for such investments and services also benefit from government support. 88 market. But to arrest the decline of the sector and ensure that it contributes to Botswana’s diversification efforts, key reforms are needed. Main Constraints An elevated cost structure at the Botswana Meat Commission The BMCs excess capacity, combined with a declining supply of cattle– or throughput – to its three abattoirs, have resulted in growing losses for the parastatal (figures 3 and 4). While the BMC achieved good technical and financial results during the first 20 years of its existence, this changed in the 1990s: the throughput of cattle declined, and exacerbated by drought and disease outbreaks, the annual surplus37 turned into an annual shortfall. An important contributor to the BMC’s rising costs was the decision to build extra capacity with a second abattoir in Francistown – due to anticipated increases in supply of cattle to the BMC at the time; a third slaughterhouse was built in the red zone38, in Maun. The Francistown abattoir was opened in 1990. None of the three abattoirs have ever functioned at full capacity, in most years even 50 percent capacity is not attained: average throughput in the 2000 to 2009 period has been 140,000 head of cattle, below just Lobatse’s nominal capacity of 160,000, and well under its true capacity of 208,000.39 (Jefferis, 2005) To overcome the associated rising costs, BMC management lowered the purchase prices for cattle, which led to an even lower throughput through the BMC and a further erosion of the financial performance of the company. While purchase prices have been raised significantly since 2006, they remain below those in place in neighboring countries, and BMC’s high cost structure and the declining supply of cattle make the strategy unsustainable. The BMCs costs have become a major contributor to poor outcomes in the sector and excess capacity and other costs make BMC uncompetitive. 300000 140% 250000 120% 200000 100% 150000 80% 60% 100000 40% 50000 1974 1977 1980 1983 1986 1989 1992 1995 1998 2001 2004 2007 20% BMC Throughput 0% Linear (BMC… 1996 1998 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 Fig. 3: BMC Throughput as a percent of Fig. 4: BMC production and net sales administrative costs as a percent of net sales Beyond the high costs associated with excess capacity, the BMC’s labor costs are also elevated. There is little flexibility to adjust the number of workers to the level of business, such as during periods in which there is an outbreak of FMD or during major overhaul of the abattoir when 37 According to the BMC Act, BMC cannot make a profit as this would mean that producers have been paid too little for their animals. 38 With Foot and Mouth Disease (FMD) endemic especially in wild buffaloes, countries that wanted to continue the export of beef to Europe started a system of compartmentalization and zoning. Through veterinary cordon fences, areas where FMD and buffaloes were endemic (“red zones�) and thus vaccination of cattle would be required were separated from areas free of disease, the catchment areas for cattle for export (“green zones�). A buffer zone, where animals would not be vaccinated, but would also not be eligible for export as they served as “sentinels� to detect any break out of the virus from the so-called red zone were created in between the red and green zones. 39 Nominal capacity is calculated based on less than 10 months operation, with extended annual shutdowns for “maintenance�. True capacity is on the basis of 52-week operation, 5 days per week with maintenance carried out on weekends. (Jeffris, 2005) 89 slaughter is suspended. Moreover, government has stipulated that the BMC must pay a minimum of P14/kg live weight or 80 percent of the price in the green zone (whichever is higher) for animals in the red zone. In this way the company is forced to cross-subsidize farmers in the red zone at the expense of its profitability and also, indirectly, at the expense of farmers in the green zone.40 While BMC management is working hard on containing costs, FMD outbreaks and the current closure of the EU beef export market are serious setbacks in the process of rationalizing the company’s cost structure. The BMC’s inability to ensure quality and sufficient throughput, combined with high costs, means that it is dependent on government support to remain afloat. A deteriorating supply-side problem for the BMC, generated by poor herd management and stagnant offtake rates and by BMC’s own high cost structure, is aggravated by growing domestic demand for beef. Increasing competition from private abattoirs and butcheries has exacerbated the problems of lower throughput at the parastatal and thus, lower exports and a downward spiral in viability of the beef sector. While the BMC is price setter and largest buyer of beef and cattle, there is increasing competition from a growing domestic market. Although the BMC offers prices that are slightly higher than those offered by private abattoirs and butcheries, its share of total offtake appears to have declined precipitously from around 80 percent in the 1970s and early 1980s, to 50 percent or less today. This provides further evidence that the BMC is uncompetitive even in the domestic market despite its access to a high price export market. Its prices do not compensate for more complicate procedures, and the risk to farmers of having their cattle condemned. This trend will continue unless new approaches to increasing productivity of cattle husbandry in Botswana are implemented. Assuming similar domestic consumption growth to South Africa (1 percent per year over the next ten years), means that per capita beef consumption will be on the order of 22.1 kg/capita per year. Accounting for population growth, this would imply total consumption of 43,000 tons of beef in 2020. This is an increment of 7000 tons over current consumption of 36,000 tons. Botswana’s total production today is on the order of 50,000 tons. If declining productivity and production trends are not reversed over the coming decade, the current surplus for export would have almost disappeared. Lack of trade competition The BMC’s monopoly in beef exports and the ban on live cattle exports have been counterproductive as competitive pressures to increase efficiency in the sector are reduced. This, combined with government support, means that the BMC has few incentives to significantly trim its costs. With the BMC’s inability to sustainably offer economic prices to cattle farmers, herds will be reduced. These arguments are not new and a number of assessments41 that have come before have concluded that the beef export sector faces a bleak future unless serious reforms are undertaken. In effect, Botswana is a less competitive net beef exporter, and has only been able to supply markets that offer a high level of preferential access and high price levels. The EU is such a market; South Africa, Botswana’s second export market for beef is also highly protected for beef imports from outside the Southern African Customs Union (SACU), with a tariff of 40 percent. (ODI, 2007) Beyond providing the incentives to increase efficiency at the BMC, export competition could increase the viability of the troubled livestock sector as a whole. Removing the ban on non- BMC beef exports and especially, on live cattle exports, would give producers access to higher prices, an essential element to restore the viability of cattle farming in Botswana. South Africa, for instance, imports beef and live cattle42: it imports weaner calves from Namibia and beef from Uruguay, Brazil, Argentina and Paraguay to meet domestic market and feedlot demand. Between 2000 and 2009, South Africa produced on average 54,000 fewer tons of beef per year than it 40 Although without the creation of the red zone the green zone would not have been able to gain access to the lucrative EU market. 41 Jefferis, 2005; World Bank, 2006; ODI, 2007. 42 The South African market is unlikely to be a lucrative market for this feedlot beef, as in South Africa the use of growth promoters is not restricted, whereas in Botswana as per EU requirements, it is. This gives Botswana a disadvantage of a lower slaughtering out percentage (53 percent in Botswana against 60 percent and more in South Africa due to the use of anabolic drugs) and a lower daily weight gain (average 1.5 kg against 2 kg in South Africa through use of antibiotics and growth promoters). 90 consumed (SA Agricultural Statistics); it imports between 150,000 and 300,000 weaners per year, and on the order of 7-10,000 tons of beef (it is also a beef exporter). Batswana cattle producers, particularly communal producers, would benefit from weaner exports to South Africa (or potentially elsewhere in the region or beyond43 where feedlots are economically viable) as South African feedlot buyers prefer lightweight cattle such as those produced on communal rangelands in Botswana and offer high prices for them since they represent maximum potential weight gain and highest potential returns. As in Namibia, this could take place through an auction system whereby weaners are sold to South African (or other) buyers. Such an arrangement would benefit farmers through higher prices (regional export price parity) for lightweight cattle (although if there were a very large increase in exports to South Africa, prices might be affected). It would also provide an incentive for some to switch to weaner production, a much higher productivity system than Botswana’s current oxen production system,44 since relative to the status quo, the productivity of herds – i.e. calving and off-take rates - would be significantly higher. Jefferis (2005) estimates that annual offtake could more than double (if all cattle producers shifted to the new production system), providing sufficient numbers to supply exports to South Africa as well as increase BMC’s throughput. (Jefferis, 2005) An implication of a significant producer response to such a strategy is that BMC supplies would depend on the emergence in Botswana of feedlots to produce slaughter cattle. And as Botswana feedlots will have to compete with the SA market to purchase weaner inputs, higher BMC prices for slaughter cattle will be necessary to generate sufficient supplies. However, feedlots are likely to only economically viable if BMC prices are pegged at EU export parity prices. Unlike South Africa, Botswana does not produce feed and fodder in sufficient quantities to supply feedlots; feed is also often produced with the help of government subsidies.45 Only an EU export parity price would provide feedlots with enough margin to pay weaner producers live weight South African export parity prices. Such a strategy would require the significant restructuring and rationalization of the BMC, as well as export liberalization. There is broad support for greater use of feedlots to improve the usage of existing slaughter capacities; indeed, the Botswana Cattle Producers Association (BCPA) supports this shift to weaner/feedlot production and the export liberalization it implies. (ODI, 2007) Feedlotting as a strategy, however, deserves careful reflection. While feedlots have been developed in Botswana, the country has no comparative advantage in producing the required feed and fodder which must therefore must be imported. Food grains, particularly maize and sorghum are heavily subsidized, which when bought by feedlots locally is an indirect subsidy to the beef lot. In addition, it is very questionable from the economic point of view whether without access to the lucrative EU market feedlotting is still profitable. Looking towards the future, it is also questionable whether European consumers would accept meat produced under such a feedlot system from an animal welfare and environmental point of view, if this way of producing beef in Botswana were widely known. There has been a change in the EU market as a result of increased consumer awareness. The trend is away from quantity production towards quality production with a strong focus on food safety and food quality. In the light of falling EU import prices it is therefore advisable to seek getting into higher price market niches with brand recognition in order to increase the revenues obtained from exporting. EU consumers’ preference for high quality products and their environmental concerns have the potential to offer lucrative market niches that 43 Indonesia, for instance, imports Australian weaners for domestic consumption as there is not enough land available to keep sufficient numbers of productive cows. 44 In an oxen production system, oxen are grazed until they reach 4-5 years or a slaughter weight of around 200-240kg, whatever comes first. The share of cows in reproductive age is between 30 and 40 percent of the overall herd. At first sight this oxen production system seems inefficient due to the low proportion of breeding cows in the herd. It is also risky, since animals kept for 4-5 years until ready for slaughter run a higher risk of mortality than weaners sold at 9 months to 1 year or store cattle at 1.5-2 years. But it fits the low level of management currently in effect, Oxen are accumulated wealth, which can be monetized when required; breeding cows with their calves are a category of livestock, requiring more care and attention – especially in areas with predators -- which in the communal cattle post grazing system with an absentee owner cannot be provided. 45 By extension, it is unlikely that Botswana feedlot margins would allow them to export beef to South Africa. Feedlot exports would need to target high price markets such as the EU to remain economically viable. 91 are unlikely to be filled with feedlot animals. (ODI, 2007) It may be best for Botswana to focus, through branding, its small volume of beef and significant good will on the EU market on supplying premium, niche products (range-fed, “natural�) rather than rely on conventional feedlot cattle. Namibia has been quite successful in this regard, and today, for instance, obtains higher prices in the EU market than does Botswana. In addition to export liberalization, and BMC restructuring, this will require a focus on improved herd management and veterinary services, addressed below. Also in the realm of trade liberalization, allowing imports of beef may help relieve supply shortages in exports. This could be done by allowing imports from South Africa and/or by reducing the SACU common external tariff (CET) for selected product groups (this would have to be agreed by all SACU member states.) One possibility, for example, might be to allow the import of forequarters to supply domestic demand while maintaining protection for hindquarters. This would reduce the competition for cattle between the export industry and domestic retailers. The resulting increased competition from imports in the domestic market is likely to result in falling prices for non-premium cuts which would in turn provide stimuli for farmers to market high grade cattle to the BMC. The BMC, in a liberalized market, would need to pay producers the export parity price or farmers would have access to alternative export markets - as is the case for Namibian cattle farmers that can to market their live cattle in South Africa. (ODI 2007) Poor livestock management practices and range degradation Two main forms of cattle farming take place in Botswana: communal and commercial. Communal farmers (representing over 90 percent of land under cattle production) generally adopt an oxen production system, are individual owners of their own livestock, and at the end of the day keep their animals to guarantee their livelihood, be it through consumption of the products (meat, usually from slaughtered animals in distress or from small stock, milk and eggs) or from the sale of old cows and oxen. The only resource used communally is the pasture. Commercial cattle producers are referred to as such because they have made some modifications to the traditional husbandry system: usually their farms are fenced and they practice rotational grazing as an alternative to the former transhumance or they may have introduced exotic genetics on Tswana animals at an earlier stage. Where in the past these farmers followed a similar oxen production system, today they are increasingly shifting to a weaner production system, for sale to the BMC or feedlotting on farm resulting in a higher share of breeding cows in the herd and a slightly higher off take. This system also required more investments and management, as well as the import of feed and fodder for the feedlots, as these are not available in Botswana in sufficient amounts. Before the advent of borehole investments and “commercial� beef production, livestock keepers would traditionally move with the livestock, following routes from rainy season to dry season pastures. These seasonal migratory routes were the same routes as followed by the wildlife. Animals would graze in an area, usually together with wildlife, under a high-density short duration regime. This resulted in heavy non-selective grazing with a long period of rest for the vegetation, especially in the areas without permanent sources of water, until animals returned for grazing during the next annual cycle. Fixed watering points and fences have dramatically changed cattle production and management systems. In the commercial fenced farms, the former strategy of moving with animals has been replaced by one which always maintains a high level of standing forage in the range, so that even in drought years there remains grazing for animals till the rains come again. Animals kept under such conditions of low grazing densities, especially with the current rate of bush encroachments, are literally and figuratively far from their owners and hard to manage accurately.46 In communal farming, the transhumant strategy has been replaced by access to a cattle post, or by farmers living in rural settlements with one or various boreholes and livestock grazing out of the village. 46 High levels of grassy biomass increase however the risk of veld fires, with as result no standing fodder reserve. In this system there is a need to establish firebreaks and to be on constant alert to control veld fires. 92 This latter group of livestock farmers has gradually lost, over the last 20 years, their area to graze their animals to newly established cattle posts. The result of their single watering point and increasingly restricted grazing area, together with competing needs for firewood and the establishment of croplands, has been a visible environmental degradation around the settlements. This has led to bush encroachment (i.e. replacement of grass by bush) further lowering the carrying capacity of the range for cattle.47 Government subsidies and assistance policies, e.g. the drilling of boreholes or establishing of perimeter fencing, have not been sufficient to improve livestock and range management.48 In the current system it is possible for an individual to attain exclusive user rights to a plot of land by asking for a lease, and this is seen as a way to increase the commercialization and improve the management of the range resource. Moreover, as livestock production is seen as a way of alleviating rural poverty, many services for the livestock sector, which elsewhere would be a private good, have been made a public good in Botswana. Support programs and projects for livestock have been many, and have included subsides on feed, husbandry inputs, loans, and support in the construction of boreholes, perimeter fences and free veterinary services. These have all tried to contribute towards the development and commercialization of communal livestock keeping. Land and water policies create disincentives to efficient land use. Since most land (about 70 percent) is under communal tenure the prevailing administrative land allocation for ranching – aimed at improving tenure security and productivity – coupled with the parallel process of allocating water rights, has led to a rapid increase in privately controlled boreholes. This has led to de facto private control over cattle post grazing areas and ranches, while leaving much of the communal areas under an open access and rangeland degradation, jeopardized by dual grazing rights. (WB Integrated Livestock Report, 2006) Government policies providing support to the drilling of boreholes and the building of perimeter fences may, in the presence of current land and water policies and shortage of financing due to the difficulty of using land as collateral, may be making matters worse. For improved management to materialize, other inputs are required, including internal fencing, further investments and improved overall management, for which it is hard to obtain financing as the land cannot be put up as collateral. Without further investments in internal fencing and improved management, the provision of a borehole and a perimeter fence merely prevents animals from straying and increases the grazing pressure on a finite land resource.49 47 The higher incidence of goats in these farms is a result of reduced carrying capacity for cattle due to this process, probably increasing impoverishment of these people, resulting in increased numbers of goats, which are better browsers and are more prolific with a higher and more spread out off-take potential. It is also these poorer farmers who engage in highly subsidized grain production (maize, millet, sorghum), whereby the government pays for plowing, cultivation, seeds and sowing: often the government support is worth more than the actual harvest obtained. 48 As importantly, heavy subsidies provide incentive to the sector to expand into areas where livestock farming is uneconomic without the subsidies. Beyond the environment impact of livestock sector expansion into fragile areas, this poses a long term threat to the sector, with declining competitiveness and dependence on government support. This appears to have already occurred in western and northern Botswana. (WB Integrated Livestock Report, 2006) 49 A shortcoming of this policy of fencing of land farms to commercialize production has been the emergence of “dual rights� whereby the leaseholder of such land is still considered part of the community with rights to of the communal grazing resources. This means that his/her cattle can still graze the communal pastures, keeping the fenced farm as a dry season deferred grazing resource. This outcome is high stocking rates of the communal resource during the growing season and when the “fenced farmers� retract with their cattle to their leasehold farms a serious shortage of standing forage for the communal cattle is carried forward to the next rainy season. This dual rights issue only plays a role in the margins of the fenced farming areas and is a localized issue. 93 70 70 60 60 50 50 40 40 30 30 Target get Targ 20 20 10 Actual 10 ual Actu 0 0 F Figure 5: P rs, commun Productivity y parameter nal Figure 6: Producti meters, comm ivity param mercial farrms rms far ource: Tenth Na So pment Plan ational Develop The long term T m problem resulting fr h rom poor herd manage ement, alonngside other r disincentiv ves such ass low prices eclining sta s, are the de andards of technical t attle produc ca ctivity, leaviing ever low wer beef urpluses for su r export. Deespite subsi idized inputs and servi otswana live ices, the Bo estock secto or suffers rom an extr fr remely low level of ext ternal input ts and poor production n parameter qually rs; this is eq rue of comm tr c munal and commercial l farmers. Production n parameters are depen ndent upon many m fa actors beyond the cont trol of the farmer’s f maanagement, such as rainfall and market m prosp pects. 50 t is however It r remarkabl e that in most statistica le to notice al sources an v nd across various year rs there is little to no di ifference inn the calvingg rate in thee breeding cows of the c e so-called communal and coommercial farmers. This T is the mostm import tant parame eter to judgee the techniical and fina ancial peerformance p e of a beef production system: No o calf = noo weaner = n no beef, and a cow eat ting for ann additiona al year witho out benefitss to the farm mer, but stil w the risk ll requiring care and with k of 51 m mortality. Botswana’s calving ra ates, betwee en 50 and 60 6 percent, compare to p o up to 85 percent in ne p eighboring countries. Moreover, all of the productivity y parameter y in use and rs currently caalculated ar re related too technical animal perf formance. There is ha ardly any at f ttention to financial prroductivity parameters s. This wou uld require fairly detai iled accounnting and finnancial anal lysis at fa arm level, w which curre f excepti ently, with few n exist.52 With a high ions, does not h free contr ribution off goods and d services fr rom govern nment to the ms, there has e beef farm s never been n a need to make uch calcula su ations. This s has resulte ed in a situaation in whi ich neither the comme ercial nor thhe coommunal b beef sectors are overly concerned with maxim mizing their r r financial returns ough thro cllose and car reful financcial monitor ring of theiir enterprise es. Incentiv cient produc ves for effic ction are urther weak fu m beef fa kened by the fact that most armers are absentee ow h wners and have s other sources off income an B nd that the Botswana t authority tax y allows losses incurre a ed in beef activities to be partly written w against othe off a er sources of income. 0 50 Although Botsw sh general produ wana Statistics tries to establis uction parameteers for the diffeerent production n systems for eaach year hrough a stratifie th ed sampling fra amework, the da ata are often too o ad hoc to mak ke predictions o over longer periods. It is costlyy to set up a da ramework to mo ata collection fr onitor such dataa and it seems th ese data are calc hat some of the culated from sur rveys done to assess the ffect of drought or disease cont ef trol. 51 For instance, mmost of Botswan st of Kalahari sand and are ext na’s soils consis tremely poor in minerals. It is therefore essen ntial for opptimum product tion, and a commmon practice el lsewhere, to sup pplement anima als with dicalciu um phosphate anda common sa alt as minimum m supplementary require ements. While some farmers supplement s ir animals with urea-containing thei g supplements ini the dry eason to compen se w nitrogen cont nsate for the low tent of the stand ding forage, in general g s it can be said that full supplementary feeding is arely practiced. ra 2 52 In beef producction the returns c are an impo s per breeding cow ortant parameteer; this can be expressed in kg weaning weigh ht sold per brreeding cow or in monetary ter rms as gross andd net return perr breeding cow. Another examp ple is returns pe o kg beef er ha in terms of prroduced or mon w ney. Such data would provide better b indicators he various beef p s to compare th production syst tems as well as alternative lannd use options, an equally imp portant considerration. 94 A focus on the EU as the main export market for Botswana beef Today, cattle producers have basically two main options: producing for the domestic market or producing for EU53 export via the BMC. Access to the EU was lost for a period of 18 months between January 2011 and August 2011; it is expensive, with increasingly stringent sanitary and phytosanitary (SPS)requirements, and long term trends are not favorable, with declining prices and more competition from lower cost, high quality, producers. The domestic market is taking a growing share of beef production. In a relatively short period of time, the reality may be – unless reforms are introduced – that Botswana will cease to export beef. Access to the EU is costly and it is no longer clear that the costs of compliance with EU criteria for beef imports can be recovered by sales revenues.54 Complying with all the conditionalities comes at an ever-increasing cost and difficulty for the Botswana beef production sector at the current level of management capacity on-farm. Botswana also meets increasingly stiffer competition on what used to be an export market with preferential treatment. Although under the Interim Economic Partnership Agreement (IEPA) Botswana has been granted a quota-less and tariff less access to the EU, similar access, although with a quota of 300,000 tons, is under negotiation to be granted to the MERCOSUR countries. Moreover, prices of beef in the EU have declined by 25 percent since the Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) reforms of 1999. Competition on the EU market is increasing from both locally produced and imported beef. Another consequence of the almost exclusive focus on exporting to the EU is that massive animal health and production support provided by the government has been dominated by the effort to comply with EU regulations at the expense of broader progress in improving production performance as measured by mortality, birth rates, or production yields. (WB Integrated Livestock Report, 2006) Long term trends in terms of the EU market are not favorable. EU access is lucrative if Botswana manages to reduce its costs and ensure higher exports. But, as noted, the future of prices is uncertain and Botswana faces growing competition from other, lower cost, high-quality exporters. A decade ago, Namibia, Zimbabwe and Botswana were, besides Australia and New Zealand, some of the few countries with a license to export to the EU. This export was capped by quota, which Botswana never met, and highly favorable conditions. Over the years more countries have managed to meet the EU SPS measures. The Cotonou preferential treatment of ACP countries was changed into (interim) EPAs, which now give tariff and quota free access to the EU market for beef that meets the EU requirements. These latter are becoming increasingly difficult to achieve with the ever increasing demands in terms of safety, quality, animal welfare and increasingly also the environment. In a globalizing world it is hard remain competitive if one sits still, especially when one is a small player. Does this imply that Botswana should abandon efforts to access the EU? Botswana is a high cost producer, and it is not clear that it would be able to compete in a low price, high volume environment. For this reason, regaining access – with reforms – makes sense. Other importing countries that have been historically less stringent in their SPS standards than the EU are generally moving in the same direction regarding beef imports and food safety in general. This may be the strongest argument in favor of one last major attempt to meet EU standards for beef exports from Botswana – the possibility that future larger exports to countries like Russia and Turkey may depend upon it. EU access is, in effect, a passport to export to other countries and 53 Botswana also exports a small quantity of beef to Norway, and of course to South Africa. But the potential for export growth to Norway is limited, and its standards as, or more, stringent than the EU’s. Exports to South Africa will not, as argued above, meet their potential without trade liberalization. More recently, there have been significant exports to Zimbabwe from FMD-affected areas, and live cattle exports to Angola are under consideration. 54 In addition to stringent SPS standards, there is the requirement for a tracking and tracing system of animals and beef. Botswana in the late nineties selected a sophisticated system based on radio frequency identification technology rumen boluses, mobile readers and computers feeding data into a central data base. Veterinary cordon fences, vaccination of livestock in the red zone, the movement control of animals through the trace-back system, and a stringent meat inspection system in the EU licensed slaughterhouses are the prerequisites for the EU beef export permit. 95 without it Botswana may not be able to compete in more lucrative, higher price niches. Botswana also produces high quality beef and still has goodwill attached to its exports. But the current policies of a monopolized market that is closed to competition and with a near- exclusive focus on exports to a single market will help with neither ensuring sustained access to the EU nor with diversifying into other markets. Farmers need a mix markets and strategies: sale of weaners to SA, which unlike Botswana has the feed resources to fatten all animals intensively, or to others; private sector buying for the domestic market; private sector buying for export; and the BMC for the EU export scheme. Producers can then make their choice, calculating which strategy gives the highest margins to the farmer; in most instances the farmer is better at doing this than government. Even if access to the EU market has been regained, it may be a good strategy, for some producers, to start to sell beef into less lucrative markets in the region. This is perhaps particularly true for producers in the “red zone�. There opportunities appear to be many. There is at SADC level a shortage of beef and meat in general. Traditional markets, such as the mining belt in DRC, are currently supplied by Brazil, which sends its meat in refrigerated containers through Walvis Bay in Namibia. The national cattle breeding herd in Zimbabwe has fallen to 400.000 breeding cows, which would mean that soon the country will not be self-sufficient in beef any longer. Markets are also emerging in Angola. Recommendations The cattle and beef sector plays an important role in Botswana’s economy and society. While its contribution to GDP has declined over the years and is small today, it is important as an export and for rural employment and livelihoods. It is a sector, however, which has become less competitive over time, with declining exports and rising costs, and which is not living up to its potential as a source of growth and economic and trade diversification in Botswana. The latest blow has been Botswana’s loss of access to its largest and most remunerative market55. This is a manifestation of a number serious challenges affecting the beef and livestock sector described above, including declining production and yields, a poor incentive structure partly due to lack of export competition and a monopoly structure, the high cost structure at the BMC, and large, ineffective, inefficient and poorly targeted government subsidies. While external constraints such as drought and disease have impacted the sector, many of the problems are policy failures. This section proposes some options for addressing these policy failures. Increasing production and productivity levels A major long-term problem facing the cattle and beef sector is the declining standards of technical cattle productivity, leaving ever lower beef surpluses for export. Improved productivity of both commercial and communal cattle-raising – in terms of reproduction, weight gain, offtake, reduced mortality, and protection from disease – is necessary. For this to happen, management levels will have to increase drastically. There is anecdotal evidence that when cattle-owning civil servants retire and start dedicating more time and money towards their livestock enterprise, productivity increases sharply in a short time. Most livestock owners keeping their animals in a cattle post work on their own, have their own herd boy, pay their share in the water pumping, but do not further interact and work together on improvements in the day to day management of the cattle in a cattle post, reduction of costs or increasing the returns through e.g. joint sales. An option to increase the management levels is to organize the farmers into associations with common management, training and extension and joint purchase of services, goods and joint marketing so as to develop economies of scale. The following are measures and policy reforms that will help in achieving improved herd management and improved productivity: 55 As of February 2011 Botswana has, after an audit by the EU Veterinary and Food Organization, voluntarily decided to suspend its export of beef to the EU till such a time that all the shortcomings as identified in the EU VFO organization’s audit have been resolved. 96 - A revival of field cooperatives would seem to be the only way to rebuild acceptable levels of productivity, and with them the economics required to profit from export. This will take time, and is a difficult, though necessary undertaking. The best path to this goal runs through the natural points of concentration of cattle (fenced farms, boreholes and cattle posts), people (rural settlements), or both. Field cooperatives would employ a professional livestock specialist (also for small ruminants) to lead the farmers and herders into more productive and profitable management approaches. - To facilitate this, a gradual shift of veterinarians from government employment to private business or employment by groups of farmers with salary payments partially funded by a levy on export slaughter - should be considered. These veterinarians would handle individual animal health care at owners’ expense (vaccination for contagious diseases would still be paid for by government). Assistance (such as a small credit program) in establishing these private practices would be a legitimate government (DVS) expense. This would create the currently missing private veterinary practice in the rural areas, although it would require thorough planning and a step-by-step approach as currently there are only a few veterinarians in private large animal practice in Botswana and the many years of free veterinary services have left farmers unused to paying for necessary veterinary services. - Tertiary education with the emphasis on skill development is needed. It seems that livestock farming is becoming the work of retired people and the rural poor. It will be important to promote livestock farming as a career and to maintain skilled and enthusiastic people, without which innovation and change will not be possible. Internships for young prospective beef farmers on established ranches would go a long way to develop the right skills and attitudes to further commercialize and improve the production and productivity of the Botswana livestock sector. In turn, intensification of production through increased and intensified management of the range, animals and preparation for the market, will create rural employment. - An overhaul of the current system of extension and advisory services provided through the Livestock Advisory Centers is required. Current services are inadequate and more concerned with giving advice on how to use the vaccines, drugs and equipment for sale than improving overall beef farming management. Training on farm business management and economics is especially needed. These Livestock Advisory Centers should be increased in number and auctioned off to private entrepreneurs in the medium term. Assistance to their establishment (small credits) could also be a legitimate government expense. - Mitigation of the impact of droughts can be achieved through developing more fodder and feed resources and increasing the number of small stock (usually more resilient in the case of drought and with a quicker reproductive cycle to restore animal numbers). The government grain production under dry land conditions by supporting farmers with free seed, fertilizer and plowing, cultivation and planting of the land; the results of these programs are poor and it is not certain that the yields cover the investments made. Dryland fodder production through the creation of fodder banks with perennial grasses for both hay production and grazing would create a more robust and less costly source of revenue for rural people. Hay made in years with good rains can be used for own livestock and sold in drought years. Growing grass as a crop is a new concept for Botswana farmers, which would require demonstrations and extension efforts. But hay production would seem a better business prospect than high-risk production of annual feed grains at the expense of the budget. Current prices of hay are 1500-2000 P/ton, with expected yields of 1-1.5 ton/year, which are very competitive with the poor grain yields typically experienced. After establishment of the grass little or no additional costs other than the harvesting and application of manure are required. All successful farming systems in Africa are based on grass rotations (the maize-soya- lovegrass beef system in 97 South Africa, the tobacco-maize-Rhodes grass-beef system in Zimbabwe, Napier fodder- zero-grazed dairy cattle in East Africa) and there is no reason to doubt that perennial grass production will make a positive contribution towards increased productivity and production in the Botswana beef sector. Trade Liberalization Farmers are poorly served by the current system where they only have access to two markets – the BMC and local butcheries – to the exclusion of more profitable export markets such as South Africa and others. As it is unlikely that in the near term anyone else will be able to supply the EU other than the BMC the monopoly for export to the EU may even be maintained, but only if other exports and imports are liberalized. Without the liberalization of other exports, there would be few pressures on the BMC to offer producers real export parity prices, or to rationalize its costs. - Lifting the ban on non-BMC beef and live cattle exports is essential to the viability of the sector in Botswana. Without the trade liberalization the BMC will not be exposed to sufficient incentives to significantly alter its cost structure. Without a change in the cost structure, farmers cannot be paid economic prices for their cattle of beef, further exacerbating the downward spiral of declining production. BMC Restructuring The combination of BMC inefficiency, excess capacity and the bans of non-BMC beef and cattle exports are costing the cattle industry, and the public budget, considerable amounts. To enhance profitability and allow the BMC to live up to its core objective – maximizing revenues for livestock producers – the overhead costs of slaughter and processing will have to be reduced drastically. The restructuring of the BMC therefore seems inevitable to reduce the agency’s entire cost structure in terms of staffing, salary levels and other personnel costs, and other overheads. It must be made clear that the BMC should serve the farmers, not primarily its employees. One approach to restructuring the BMC would be to organize its governance functions as a series of linked cooperatives, owned and overseen by the farm community itself, as outlined below. - A first concrete step is to reduce the number of cattle slaughterhouses from three to two, thus removing a significant amount of underutilized overhead cost. If Lobatse will remain the main export slaughterhouse, either Maun in the red zone or Francistown in the green zone may have to close or be sold to the private sector. The BMC should be asked to study the ramifications and recommend one option on clear business grounds. If Maun is to remain open, the government-stipulated pricing link of red-zone cattle to green zone cattle prices needs to be severed. - Cross subsidies within the BMC (i.e. if the Maun abattoir is to remain open) should be eliminated. The first major step here is that subsidized purchase prices of cattle in the red zone for the domestic market, tied to the purchase prices for export cattle in the green zone, should be eliminated, and henceforth determined by true market prices. - There is also the need to reduce labor costs by cutting the wage bill and increasing the flexibility of employment practices within the BMC. While staff of the BMC has the normal rights of staff of any private firm, these rights are distinctly secondary to those of the livestock producers, those for whom the BMC was created in the first place. Work rules would also have to be made more flexible to allow seasonal and occasional (e.g. due to disease outbreaks) furloughs of staff for those periods with reduced throughput . - More broadly, the overall BMC governance structure should be turned over fairly completely to committees of farmers elected according to standard worldwide cooperative procedures. In effect, the BMC should be restructured into a federation or umbrella of local and specialized cooperatives. The purpose of the BMC is to maximize farmer incomes and the logical forum and body to oversee this process is the collective of 98 farmers themselves. A number of arrangements can be made to cater to the fact that there may be a divide in interests between larger commercial cattle farmers, who indeed may not depend largely on cattle for their daily income, and smaller more subsistence-oriented cattle farmers. A small board of trustees of highly respected national figures should also be emplaced, not to run the BMC, but specifically to prevent disinformation, elite capture or corruption by management. Addressing the rising maintenance cost of the “license to export beef� for the national budget The government has long taken it upon itself to execute and finance a large number of tasks in the production and export of beef. With the financial crisis and the increasing demands of the export markets in terms of guarantees for safety and quality this is becoming a heavy burden for the country’s budget, whereby it is increasingly uncertain that the costs incurred by government to make beef export possible are recovered from the additional revenue of export to the EU. A solution would be to initiate a system of cost recovery, either directly from farmers or indirectly from a levy at the export slaughterhouses to pay for livestock development activities. The responsibility and the execution of such activities could shift from government to the private sector and farmers’ organizations. - A important concrete step in reducing government expenditure for non-BMC activities would be to eliminate subsidies from the production of food grain. Given Botswana's climate (even without future climate change), this is a consistently losing proposition, as already noted. At far lower cost, this program can be replaced with promotion of drought-resistant perennial grasslands, as fodder banks, which could provide either grazing, cut fodder, or both. These have far higher chances of success, as in other countries in southern Africa, than the production of food grain in an unsuitable environment. Botswana has no comparative advantage in this area and the use of imported feed grains in feedlots is likely to be uneconomic. - Beginnings need to be made in shifting costs to farmers that are purely private in nature, including veterinary care linked to the health of individual animals. This is especially true in the case of larger commercial farmers who now reap most of the benefits. EU Access and diversification towards new markets Diversification of exports to new markets seems inevitable for the viability of the beef and cattle sector whether or not Botswana pursues renewed access to the EU beef market. The case for continuing to prioritize access to the EU market, however, needs to be better understood. - As noted above, the BMC export monopoly should be lifted to allow farmers to access non-EU markets, particularly regional ones. - A quick but accurate study is needed to compare all Botswana’s costs of compliance with EU regulations against incremental revenues due to EU access. - Being a high cost producer, Botswana needs to work towards branding its product and ensuring access to high price niche markets. Botswana beef so far has never been branded as such on the EU market, or elsewhere. Increasingly selective consumers want more than a piece of meat on their plate: they want to be assured that this product has not damaged the environment, was produced respecting the animal’s welfare and integrity and has not created social injustice and inequality. In all of these lies a unique opportunity for Botswana to position itself as a beef producer to the world, where traditional values combined with modern decent governance may present a livestock sector free of coercion or exploitation. The replacement of commercial feedlotting precariously based on imported feed, by feeding in the paddocks, would assist in this, 99 thus making better use of the grazing, guaranteeing animal welfare and helping farmers to add more value to their product. Flexible short-term feeding credits linked to sales contracts into lucrative markets will facilitate such moves. - A quick study of potential exports to southern African neighbors should determine what standards and costs of production would be required to enter strongly into those markets, and whether Botswana could profit from that trade. Stimulating Sustainable Growth in the Botswana Tourism Industry Botswana has traditionally been one of the leaders in Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) tourism, using its extraordinary wildlife viewing opportunities in the Okavango Delta and Chobe area to lure tourists from around the globe. Its strong stewardship of the country’s unique natural resources has enabled it to attract investment and a steady stream of tourists, many of whom pay upwards of $500 per day. Tourism is one of the few non-mining sectors in Botswana that has grown faster than overall GDP over the past decade. Yet it is showing signs of sluggishness, with average growth of only 1.3 percent over the past five years for which reliable data is available.56 And while some steps have been taken to strengthen the sector57, there is clearly a need for more concerted action—particularly in the face of mounting competition. This is evident from Botswana’s decline in the ranking of the World Economic Forum’s (WEF) Travel & Tourism (T&T) Competitiveness Index (TTCI), which evaluates countries on 75 tourism-related indicators. Botswana dropped 12 slots to 91 (of 139 countries) between 2010 and 2011.58 Clearly, Botswana cannot afford to be complacent in its tourism policies. Beyond strengthening sector institutions, skills and infrastructure, reforms in a number of supporting sectors (air transport, ICT, labor and work permits, access to land and zoning) are needed if the sector is to attain its potential and play a more vital role in Botswana’s diversification efforts. Performance of the Sector Tourism is a major contributor to the Botswana economy, both in terms of the jobs it creates as well as the export revenues it generates. In 2009, Botswana received 1.6 million international tourists, who spent a total of $452 million in the country.59 The tourism industry’s direct revenues represented 2.4 percent of total GDP in 2011, but the number climbs to 6.5 percent when indirect and induced spending are included.60 Tourism is responsible for 18,500 direct jobs in Botswana representing 3.1 percent of total employment in the country, a figure that increases to 45,000 (7.6 percent of total employment) 61 when jobs that are indirectly supported by the industry are included.62 The number of direct tourism jobs has increased 26.3 percent over the past five years. Of those directly employed in tourism, 53 percent are female Batswana, 40 percent are male Batswana, 4 percent are male foreigners, and 3 percent are female foreigners.63 Data on the economic contribution of the sector are poor, however, and reliable figures on tourism’s contribution to services and total exports are not available, although estimates are that tourism constitutes about 15 percent of Botswana’s exports. In terms of receipts from international tourists, United 56 Botswana Department of Tourism (2010) Tourism Statistics 2005-2009, Ministry of Environment, Wildlife, and Tourism, Gaborone. 57 including the creation of the Botswana Tourism Organization (BTO) 58 WEF (2011) Travel &Tourism Competitiveness Index Country Profiles: Botswana, WEF, Geneva. 59 ibid 60 Botswana Department of Tourism (2011) Tourism Statistics 2006-2010, Ministry of Environment, Wildlife, and Tourism, Gaborone. 61 WTTC (2011a) Travel & Tourism Economic Impact 2011: Botswana, WTTC, London. 62 WTTC (2012) Travel & Tourism Economic Impact 2012: Botswana, WTTC, London. 63 Botswana Department of Tourism (2010) Tourism Statistics 2005-2009, Ministry of Environment, Wildlife, and Tourism, Gaborone. 100 Nations World Tourism Organization (UNWTO) data shows that the figure has more than doubled in a decade. Receipts increased from $US222 million in 2000 to $US452 million in 2009, although the accuracy of these figures is debatable. 64 The growth potential of tourism is high, with the possibility of generating greater revenues and more employment, particular among youth, women, and rural populations. Fifty-two percent of surveyed tour operators in SSA indicated that Southern Africa as the region (highlighting, South Africa, Botswana and Namibia, in that order) with the most potential for tour operations in SSA between 2010 and 2015. (Twining-Ward, 2010) The sector’s potential to contribute to Citizen Economic Empowerment (CEE) is also important, despite frequent claims to the contrary. In 2001, 36% of tourism businesses were citizen-owned; by 2010, the figure had grown to 49 percent (Figure 7). 400 350 341 300 250 Citizens 210 200 150 139 Joint Venture 100 50 Non-Citizens 0 Source: Botswana Department of Tourism (2011) Figure 7: Ownership Structure of Botswana Tourism Businesses Nevertheless, actual growth of the sector, in terms of international arrivals, has slowed significantly in recent years and Botswana’s market share in the SADC region is falling. The annual growth rate of arrivals was an anemic 1.3 percent between 2005 and 2009, a significant deceleration from annual average growth rates of 6.3 percent over the past ten years, when international arrivals grew from 923,250 to 1.6 million.65 To better understand these trends, it is important to look at specific tourist segments.66 In Botswana, leisure tourists only represent around 19 percent of total arrivals (see Figure 8). Leisure tourists are coveted above other types of tourists, as they tend to stay longer and spend more: in 2008 the 19 percent leisure tourists were responsible for 33 percent of the overall tourism spend.67 Compared to regional competitors, Botswana receives few leisure tourists (Figure 9), and has a mere 1.8 percent market share in the SADC region (Table 1). Of greater concern, however, is that this market share is decreasing. According to an extensive market segment study conducted by African Development Bank (AfDB) in 2011, Botswana is not effectively capitalizing on SADC tourism 64 Receipts data is likely unreliable and the methodology utilized to derive receipts data has changed in the past several years. Data derived prior to the change in methodology may have been overestimated and data derived after the change may in fact be too low. Regardless, the change in methodology means that it is difficult to accurately discern trends in data from the past decade. (Interview with K. Jefferis, Managing Director, Econsult, Gaborone, Botswana, October 2011). 65 Botswana Department of Tourism (2010) Tourism Statistics 2005-2009, Ministry of Environment, Wildlife, and Tourism, Gaborone. 66 These segments include “leisure tourists�, “visiting friends and relatives� (VFR), “business�, and “transit�. 67 According to the Botswana DOT, the three top leisure source markets (country of residence) in 2010 were all from the region: South Africa, Zimbabwe, and Zambia. These were followed by USA, UK, and Germany. 101 growth. Between 2005 and 2008, Botswana only increased its number of international tourist arrivals by 10,000 and as such, only experienced 0.3 percent of all SADC tourism growth during that period.68 If Botswana’s growth had been on a pace with the rest of the region, there would have been an additional 300,000 tourists, who would have spent an additional BWP 600 million in 2008.69 Source: Botswana Department of Tourism (2009) Sources: Messerli and Twining-Ward (2011) and South African Tourism (2011) Note: Zimbabwe figures may include same-day visitors Figure 8: International Visitor Segments Figure 9: Regional International Leisure Tourist Arrivals Botswana’s minimal tourism growth can in large part be attributed to its ineffectiveness in attracting more foreign independent tourists (FITs), a fast-growing segment that is fueling much of the tourism growth in the SADC region.70 The study concluded that Botswana should concentrate the largest part of its resources on the Fly-in and FIT markets71; in contrast, currently the largest number of arrivals is coming from RITs (119,200), not a high-yield market. Even though there were 53 percent more RITs than FITs in 2010, FITs generated 34 more revenue (BWP 413 million). Looking to the future, the FITs and Fly-ins are projected to account for the largest revenue gains from 2010-2020 by a considerable margin: 49 percent and 22 percent, respectively. The next largest is the RIT market at only 9 percent. In terms of employment generation, the luxury fly-in market is strongest in job-creation, followed by the FIT, with RITs in last place. The Fly-in market is fairly easy to convert, as high quality infrastructure and services 68 These figures are based on data obtained from UNWTO, which considers tourists to be only those spending at least 24 hours in the destination. Therefore, all of their international arrival statistics exclude day trippers. 69 African Development Bank (2011) Preliminary Market Segment Analysis of the Tourism Sector in Botswana, April 2011. 70 The study classified and derived key statistics for the eight market segments that make up the majority of Botswana’s international tourist arrivals: 1. Luxury fly-in safari visitor (Fly-in): fly-in visits to luxury game lodges in concession areas 2. Mobile safari visitor: travelling through organized trips to various destinations in the country 3. Cross-border excursionist: taking a short trip to Botswana from neighboring destinations 4. Overlander: traveling in large organized groups to see various highlights in overland trucks 5. Foreign independent traveler (FIT): overseas (excluding Africa) visitors traveling independently with rented transport, largely following their own arrangements. 6. Regional independent traveler (RIT): Africa residents traveling independently in own vehicles 7. Conference or meeting delegates: attending a conference or business meeting 8. Special interest visitors: visitors attracted to specific places for activities such as fishing, birding The study evaluated each of the segments in order to determine which Botswana should target. Evaluation was based on yield (size, expenditures per tourist, jobs created) and “ease of conversion�. 71 Annex 1 shows each segment’s yield in terms of current (2010) and projected (2020) estimates for arrivals, revenue generation, and impact on job creation. 102 are in place and the private sector has considerable resources to market Botswana to this segment. The full potential of the FIT market, however, is not as easy to tap. This is the segment’s greatest drawback, with some of the best channels for reaching FITs are currently under-utilized in Botswana. Table 1: SADC Leisure Tourism Arrivals Market Share and Growth (2005-2008) Botswana Mozambique Namibia South Africa Tanzania Zimbabwe % Share of SADC 1.8 1.9 3.3 61.7 4.4 12.3 Leisure Tourism Arrivals 2008 Real Gains in Leisure 10 110 157 2,269 185 840 Tourist Arrivals 2005- 2008 (‘000s) % Share of SADC 0.3 2.9 4.1 60 4.8 22.2 Holiday Arrival Gains 2005-2008 Source: African Development Bank (2011) Table 2: Number and Ten-Year Growth Trends of Tourism Business 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 Accommodations 103 113 128 143 145 145 159 170 180 184 Mobile Safari 112 134 140 143 135 149 164 158 158 158 Operators Game Drive 147 158 194 210 204 220 225 230 236 239 Operators Source: Botswana Department of Tourism (2011) Another shortcoming affecting tourism’s growth and market share in the region is the general shortage in accommodations. Table 2 shows the growth trajectory of the main types of accommodation supply business over the past 10 years. The growth in accommodations during that period has been fair, but has not kept up with demand in some places. In fact, the 2000 Master Plan projected that at least 8,000 rooms would be needed by 2010, whereas the actual number was only 6,693.72 This shortfall in rooms alone has cost 1,934 direct jobs given that each room generates an average 1.5 jobs.73 Certainly the undersupply problem is quite acute in Gaborone, which has a chronic shortage of hotel rooms. A World Bank SSA tourism database reveals that the number of rooms in Botswana is the lowest among regional competitors. Using data from 2008, Botswana’s 4,942 rooms were eclipsed by totals from South Africa (65,000), Mozambique’s (11,583 rooms), Namibia (9,068), Zimbabwe (6,319), and Zambia (5,979).74 Mobile safari operators have increased from 112 in 2001 to 158 in 2010. However, the number has stayed fixed at 158 over the past few years given a government-mandated license moratorium while the Department of Wildlife and National Parks studies ways of reducing congestion inside 72 Republic of Botswana, Ministry of Commerce and Industry (2000) Botswana Tourism Master Plan, Department of Tourism, commissioned by the European Union, Gaborone. 73 3.2 jobs are created per five-star hotel room, 2.2 jobs in a four-star hotel room, 1.4 jobs in a three-star hotel room, 1.3 jobs in a two- star hotel room. .92 jobs in a 1-star hotel and .83 in a non-star rated hotel . (African Development Bank (2011) Preliminary Market Segment Analysis of the Tourism Sector in Botswana, April 2011) 74 Messerli, H. and Twining-Ward, L. (2011) Policy Note and Background Paper on Tourism Growth and Employment in Namibia, Unpublished Report for the AFTFP, World Bank, Washington, D.C. 103 key protected areas. The number of game drive operations has increased fairly steadily from 147 in 2001 to 239 in 2010. 75 Challenges to Growth in the Sector Product Diversification The need for diversification of Botswana’s tourism offerings, both in terms of types of products and their geographical spread, is well understood by tourism stakeholders in Botswana. The Okavango Delta and Chobe area have limited capacity for receiving more tourists, given the importance of ensuring their conservation. Gains in revenue and employment will need to come primarily from providing tourists with other options that will keep them in the country longer, spread their expenditures, and give them compelling reasons to return. The importance of diversification was stressed in the 2000 Tourism Master Plan and nearly every study or policy document since then. There have, in fact, been a number of positive steps taken in past years. These include BTO’s tendering of 11 new concessions (mostly in the South and West) in 2009 and its current work to develop seven community-based tourism projects around the country. The approach to attracting tourists, however, continues to be largely supply-driven rather than demand-driven. As such, it has not been based upon the interests and needs of strategically selected target markets. Product diversification efforts have therefore had mixed success in attracting high growth markets—particularly FITs. Specific challenges to product diversification exist along several spheres: tourism policy, land access, and circuit development and community tourism. - Tourism Policy A major constraint for development of the sector is that the policy framework for the government to address diversification and other key issues is not in place.76 In 2008, DOT worked with UNWTO to review the 1990 Tourism Policy and subsequently create a new one.77 After considerable stakeholder consultation, a new policy was produced but was never approved by the Botswana government. Without a policy, DOT lacks a clear direction and mandate. - Access to Land Opportunities for investment have been hindered by difficulties in access to land. Establishment or expansion of tourism destinations is often contingent upon having adequate accommodations facilities. Yet investors report considerable difficulties in procuring leases from the Department of Lands (DOL). UNCTAD (2003), FIAS (2004) and others have highlighted the impact of difficulties for foreign investors in particular to acquire commercial land in Gaborone, although anecdotal evidence suggests that citizens face difficulties and delays as well. This is particularly inhibits new entrants into the industry. Land is only available through leases awarded by the various Land Boards and it is not clear who qualifies for access, furthermore there are investors 75 There are also community tourism businesses, although the exact number is elusive. A recent estimate of community-based organizations (CBOs) that are active in Community Based Natural Resource Management (CBNRM) projects is 41, of which an estimated 13 offer tourism services. (Johnson, S. (2009) State of CBNRM Report 2009, and phone interview with the author). Kalahari Conservation Society, Gaborone. They are dispersed across the country, but the largest concentration is in the North around the Okavango Delta and in the Chobe area. 76 The two bodies working most directly in tourism are the Department of Tourism (DOT), which is part of the Ministry of Environment, Wildlife, and Tourism (MEWT), and the Botswana Tourism Organization (BTO), a parastatal body set up through an act of Parliament in 2003. DOT’s principal roles include tourism policy formulation and implementation, tourist facility licensing, statistics collection, and industry training. Meanwhile, BTO’s principal activities are marketing, investment promotion, and quality assurance through classification of facilities/services and an eco-certification program. BTO is also working to develop community tourism products. BTO has offices in Gaborone, Maun, Kasane, Francistown, Ghanzi, Palapye, Tsabong, and Selebi-Phikwe. Internationally it has an office in the UK and representation in the US and Germany. (Botswana Tourism Organization (2011b), Botswana Tourism Organization Annual Review: 2009-2010, Gaborone) 77 Botswana Department of Tourism (2009) World Tourism Organization (UNWTO)/Government of Botswana Project for the Formulation of a Tourism Policy for Botswana: Report on the Review of the Tourism Policy of 1990, Gaborone. 104 who already have land allocated to them, but have difficulties in changing its zoning from agricultural production to other uses. There are also delays in the registration of interests in land titles. Progress has been very slow in responding to these concerns. In order to improve the situation, a Land Bank was created through which DOL and BTO could set aside land in areas with strategic tourism value, although results have been disappointing.78 - Circuit Development Botswana has not invested sufficiently in “circuit development�. FITs and RITs are enticed by well-defined circuits, or routes that connect high-quality attractions along good roads with infrastructure and services that fit their needs and budgets. Specific circuits have not been created in Botswana. Meanwhile, regional competitors are aggressively assembling and marketing circuits. With assistance from Open Africa (see Box 1), South Africa, Namibia, Lesotho, Mozambique, Swaziland, and Zambia have created a total of 62 circuits over the past 15 years. Botswana is notably absent from that list. - Community Tourism One of the ways that the government and civil society have looked to diversify the product base is through community tourism, although this is in decline in Botswana. Community tourism has been supported since the late ‘80s through CBNRM programs by numerous international donors.79 However, as Botswana has become an upper-middle-income country, donor support in this area has all but disappeared. Even the indigenous Botswana Community Based Organizations Network (BOCOBONET), which served as an umbrella support organization for CBOs, has collapsed due to lack of funding. According to the “State of CBNRM Report� of 2009, only 41 of the over 100 CBOs registered since the beginning of the CBNRM program are still active.80 The decrease in active CBOs and revenues is largely due to the lack of technical support that was once provided through donor-funded programs. Decreased capacity often results in communities no longer being able to provide products and services that meet the expectations of discerning tourists and tour operators. The CBNRM secretariat is now held within the Kalahari Conservation Society and both MEWT and BTO have community tourism support within their mandates whose capacity to provide critical technical support to community tourism enterprises is limited. Branding & Marketing The Botswana tourism brand is not well defined. Despite the government’s policy objective of “modified high volume/mixed price� tourism, the perception remains that Botswana is a low volume, high value destination. BTO is currently leading the effort to market and brand the country, yet is doing so without an official strategy. Its efforts seem to still be largely guided by a strategy of focusing on low volume, high-yield tourism, with limited focus on the FIT market that is driving much of the growth in the region. In the absence of a well-defined tourism branding effort, the image of Botswana has been largely shaped by private sector efforts. Yet those are aimed primarily at the Fly-in market. As such, Botswana’s image has become largely associated with luxury and exclusivity. This to some degree constrains Botswana’s ability to attract a wider market, including FITs. 78 according to BTO, no land was put up for bid in 2010, while in 2011 there have been just six re-tenders of expired leases and two community sub-leases. The problem can be attributed to limited authority granted to BTO, as well as an apparent lack of alignment between DOL’s objectives with those of the tourism sector. A prime example is Gaborone, which has a perpetual undersupply of rooms. This limits growth considerably, particularly in the lucrative and fast-growing Meetings, Incentives, Conferences, and Events market. 79 Johnson, S. (2009) State of CBNRM Report 2009. Kalahari Conservation Society, Gaborone. 80 While some of these undertake tourism and hunting activities, others are involved in production of crafts and a variety of veld products. 105 Box 1: Open Africa Open Africa is a South Africa-based social enterprise started 15 years ago under the patronage of Nelson Mandela. Through the creation and marketing of self-drive travel routes, it helps independent travelers find “authentic and inspiring journeys that help sustain rural livelihoods and enhance conservation�. Open Africa has assisted six Southern African countries (South Africa, Zambia, Namibia, Mozambique, Swaziland, and Lesotho) to establish 62 routes. These routes have incorporated 2,626 local businesses that employ 30,640 people. More specifically, Open Africa works with local communities to develop the routes, provides training workshops to build local tourism capacity, and helps market each route. A key marketing channel is Open Africa’s website (www.openafrica.org) which profiles each route including photos; maps; downloadable GPS coordinates; links to their YouTube channel; user reviews; contact information; and descriptions of all accommodations, restaurants, activities, and services along the route. Other marketing channels include stands at Indaba (the largest tourism trade fair in Southern Africa) and the Regional Tourism Organization for Southern Africa’s (RETOSA) website and newsletters. In June 2011, Namibia launched the “Kavango Open Africa Experience Route� at the Namibia Tourism Expo. This is the fourth route created by Namibia, a key regional competitor for the independent tourists that travel through Southern Africa. Sources: Open Africa website (2011), RETOSA September 2011 newsletter Figure 4: Botswana Tourism Logo and Brand Botswana Logo Effective marketing must be based on reliable and timely data, which are not generally available in Botswana. In the 2011 WEF TTCI, Botswana ranked 123 (of 139 countries) in “timeliness of providing monthly/quarterly travel and tourism data�.81 While in some ways, Botswana’s tourism statistics collection efforts have been commendable, with DOT having twice undertaken the extremely complex UNWTO Tourism Satellite Accounts (TSA) process and conducting visitor surveys twice a year (during the low and high season). One major constraint is that there is a nearly two-year lag in getting key international arrivals statistics from the Department of Immigration and Citizenship. This is in part due to the fact that the collection of immigration card information has not yet been automated. Air Access82 Botswana’s limited and expensive air transport service represents a major constraint to tourism growth. 83 The problem stems largely from a lack of competition on both international and 81 WEF (2011) Travel &Tourism Competitiveness Index Country Profiles: Botswana, WEF, Geneva. 82 Although this issue is being addressed in another chapter of the report, it is worth briefly mentioning here given its importance to the tourism sector. 83 Information from this section comes from a personal interview with air transport expert Yaw Nyampong and the presentation he and Work Bank air transport expert Charles Schlumberger created for the “Competitiveness Diversification, and Sustained Growth in Botswana� conference sponsored by the World Bank and held from November 7-8, 2011 in Gaborone. 106 national routes. Currently, the only international route on which there is competition is the Johannesburg to Gaborone route, operated by Air Botswana (AB) and South African Express (SAE). A positive recent development is the re-opening of the Johannesburg to Maun, the most important international route for tourism, in June 2012 to services by SAE. Prices are another constraint, with round-trip prices of approximately US$500 and upwards for the Johannesburg- Maun route, for instance. Such pricing excludes a significant part of the potential market. Air Botswana has also enjoyed a monopoly on all domestic flights, yet its supply of aircraft cannot fully accommodate demand from Gaborone to Maun and Kasane. As such, opportunities to attract more tourists are being squandered. Finally, Botswana does not currently receive any long-haul international flights from major tourism source countries. Therefore tourists from key source markets such as the US and UK must spend more time and money to reach Botswana. This undoubtedly depresses visitation figures. Furthermore, those that do come generally spend less time and money in Botswana given that they are flying in and out of another country. Nevertheless, the likelihood of many more long-haul flights arriving in Botswana is slim, and other avenues should be pursued to ensure easy links to regional hubs (see Chapter 5). Skills and Training There are significant gaps between the skills and knowledge being developed in Botswana’s hospitality/tourism training institutions and those required by the industry. In the 2011 WEF TTCI, Botswana ranks 134 (of 139 countries) in “Availability of Qualified Labor�, an even lower ranking than 109 (of 124) in 2009.84 Yet the 2011 WEF TTCI also ranks Botswana 48 for overall “quality of education system�.85 Clearly, the specific programs being provided for hospitality/tourism are not up to the standards of other disciplines. While the number of training institutions offering hospitality/tourism has increased in past years (to 8 public and 13 private institutions), significant skills and knowledge gaps are still present. Graduates often lack skills such as business management, problem solving, customer service, and tourism-related technology. Commonly cited knowledge gaps relate to food & beverage service, environmental conservation, and special interest areas such as birding. The training courses offered are still far more theoretical than practical, attributable to a lack of adequate facilities. Indeed there are no training institutions that are singularly focused on hospitality/tourism.86 The institutional shortcomings result in a scarcity of adequate Batswana candidates, particular at the managerial and technical levels. Businesses are therefore compelled to hire foreign labor. This practice is critical for businesses to meet the demands of their customers, particularly in the high-end establishments. Yet it represents lost employment opportunities for Batswana and reduces the competitiveness of businesses, which have to pay more for foreign labor. The average foreign salary in the hotel and restaurant sector is 4.3 times higher than the average citizen salary (1,759 pula vs 7,643 pula/month).87 The impact of government initiatives to address this need – a two Pula per night bed levy that finances a tourism training fund – has been limited by the lack of quality training institutions fact that the training is delivered by the same institutions discussed earlier, which have limited capacity to prepare their students for the industry. Another training fund, administered by the Botswana Training Authority (BOTA), reimburses all types of business for costs associated with in-house training by accredited organizations or individuals. Funds come from a small employee turnover tax paid by businesses.88 Yet few tourism businesses participate, as the process for claiming reimbursements an accreditation is extremely cumbersome. 84 WEF (2009, 2011) Travel &Tourism Competitiveness Index Country Profiles: Botswana, WEF, Geneva. 85 WEF (2011) Travel &Tourism Competitiveness Index Country Profiles: Botswana, WEF, Geneva. 86 Botswana Tourism Organization (2009) Training Needs Analysis of Botswana’s Tourism Industry. Study prepared by Deloitte, Gaborone. 87 Republic of Botswana, Central Statistics Office (2011) September 2010 Formal Sector Employment, Gaborone. These statistics are indicative of wage disparities, but salaries for the foreign workers and citizen workers cannot be directly compared because foreigners generally fill more senior-level positions. 88 Botswana Training Authority (2011) Vocational Training Fund http://www.bota.org.bw/index.php?r=site/page&view=procedure 107 Visas While the lack of skilled local labor in some key areas creates the need to hire foreign labor, obtaining visas for foreign employees has become even more difficult in the past few years. The 2011 WEF TTCI Botswana placed 123 (out of 139 countries) in “Ease of hiring foreign labor�.89 This represents a major challenge for businesses struggling to maintain the high quality standards critical for success in a highly competitive industry. With respect to tourist visas, Botswana has a favorable regime (ranking 29 of 139 countries for “Visa requirements� in 2011 WEF TTCI),90 with citizens of 92 countries, including most key source markets, do not need a visa to enter the country.91 A challenge exists in the processing of visas for citizens of countries not on the list—which include several fast-growing source markets such as China and India. Botswana tour operators say that some prospective clients are deterred by the long processing time, which can stretch to two or three weeks. Some tourists interested in including Botswana in regional circuits simply give up because of the time and difficulty associated with visa procurement. Conservation Botswana has long been lauded for its strong wildlife conservation efforts, but important challenges exist. In 2010 it won the prestigious Tourism for Tomorrow award for “Best Destination Stewardship�,92 and the 2011 WEF TTCI ranks Botswana 6 (of 139 countries) in “protected areas� and 27 in “quality of natural environment�.93 Yet, wildlife numbers in the country have been decreasing significantly over the past several decades. In 2010, Elephants without Borders conducted the most extensive wildlife aerial survey to date in the Okavango Delta.94 They found “catastrophic� decreases in certain wildlife populations since the last survey in 1996, including 95 percent for ostriches, 90 percent for wildebeest, 84 percent for tsessebe antelopes, 81 percent for warthogs and kudus, and 66 percent for giraffes. Declines can be attributed to drought, habitat loss, and increased poaching. The situation is exacerbated by the thousands of kilometers of veterinary fences found throughout the country. The fences, erected to control the spread of cattle diseases, fragment wildlife populations and prevent seasonal migrations. As a result, wildlife suffers from decreased access to food and water. Fences also cause death through entanglement and by making animals easier prey for poachers.95 Coordination Many of the issues discussed above can, at least in part, be attributed to a lack of coordination among concerned government entities. The most pressing of these issues are land access, training, visa processing, community tourism, and statistics collection. In some cases, collaboration occurs on an ad-hoc basis and in others, not at all. Coordination is also sorely needed at the destination level. No major tourism destinations have any structures through which to promote dialogue and collaboration among government, private sector, civil society, and community organizations involved in tourism. As such, opportunities for linkages, joint marketing, data sharing, advocacy, clean-up/beautification campaigns, and other initiatives to 89 WEF (2011) Travel &Tourism Competitiveness Index Country Profiles: Botswana, WEF, Geneva. 90 WEF (2011) Travel &Tourism Competitiveness Index Country Profiles: Botswana, WEF, Geneva. 91 Republic of Botswana, Embassy of Botswana in the United States (2011) Countries that Do Not Require a Visa to Enter Botswana http://www.botswanaembassy.org/index.php?page=countries-that-do-not-require-visa 92 Tourism for Tomorrow (2011) 2010 Winners and Finalists: Botswana Tourism Board http://www.tourismfortomorrow.com/Winners_and_Finalists/Previous_Winners_and_Finalists/2010_Winners_and_Finalists/botswana -tourism-board/ 93 WEF (2011) Travel &Tourism Competitiveness Index Country Profiles: Botswana, WEF, Geneva. 94 Smith, D. (2011) “Drought and Poachers Take Botswana’s Natural Wonder to Brink of Catastrophe,� The Guardian, 6/18/2011, London. http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2011/jun/18/botswana-natural-wonder-brink-of-catastrophe 95 Mbaiwa, J. and Mbaiwa, O. (2006) The Effects of Veterinary Fences on Wildlife Populations in Okavango Delta, Botswana. International Journal of Wilderness, Vol. 12 (3), pp. 17-23. 108 improve the destination are lost. Recommendations Product Diversification - Update and approve the tourism policy The 2008 Tourism Policy document is highly regarded by DOT. While most of its recommendations are still relevant, it should be updated to ensure it is aligned with the latest industry trends and opportunities and vetted with relevant stakeholders. The final document would then need to be championed by MEWT for swift approval by the Cabinet. - Create circuits to attract independent travelers With the assistance of Open Africa, a series of circuits should be strategically identified, based upon the needs and interests of the fast-growing independent market (both FITs and RITs). Land allocation for investors should be strategically aligned with the circuit creation effort. Given the dependence of circuits on suitable road access, there may be a few areas where roads would need to be improved, although, overall, the country’s network is good. (2011 WEF TTCI ranking of 44 out of 139).96 Such decisions would need to be studied carefully, taking into consideration their potential environmental and aesthetic impact. - Create a community tourism umbrella organization International best practice suggests that an umbrella community organization, dedicated to CBNRM or only community tourism, would be of great value. For communities to “buy-in� to this organization, it is critical that they feel it directly represents their interests. While BOCOBONET had previously played this role, it was broadly focused on all types of CBOs. A more specialized organization is needed that would provide regular training and follow-up technical assistance related to financial and organizational management, as well as in technical areas such as accommodations training, food and beverage preparation, food hygiene, tour guiding, etc. The organization would also facilitate joint marketing among members, provide a platform for experience sharing among communities, and take on an advocacy role, allowing the communities to speak with a strong, unified voice when dealing with government agencies. In Botswana, there is a great opportunity to ensure that the organization is sustainably funded through the National Environmental Fund (NEF), which was written into the 2007 CBNRM Policy.97 The private sector could also potentially be called upon to contribute. Branding & Marketing - Create a Branding & Marketing Plan A branding strategic plan needs to take into consideration high-yield target segments, most notably the FITs. To capture the FIT segment, BOT would need to utilize new marketing channels. These include electronic and social media outlets (thus the importance of improving ICT services, see chapter 5), which are increasingly influential in the planning process of FITs. Namibia is currently rolling out an innovative online media campaign with the help of the United States’ Millennium Challenge Corporation (MCC) (see Box 2). Botswana’s Branding & Marketing Plan should also include an in-depth analysis of how to capture key emerging outbound markets, namely the BRIC countries (Brazil, Russia, India, and China) as well as South Korea. Currently, these markets are primarily visiting well-established destinations in Europe, the United States, and Asia. Yet over the next 5-10 years, they will begin to crave new experiences and increasingly visit emerging destinations. Those countries prepared for these markets stand to reap great benefits. In 2006, Botswana obtained Approved Destination Status 96 WEF (2011) Travel &Tourism Competitiveness Index Country Profiles: Botswana, WEF, Geneva. 97 Republic of Botswana, Ministry of Environment, Wildlife, and Tourism (2007) Community Based Natural Resource Management Policy, Gaborone. 109 (ADS) from China, a highly sought-after designation given that China is the world’s fastest growing outbound market.98 - Produce more timely statistics to improve market intelligence The amount of time DOT must wait for immigration statistics, estimated at nearly two years, must be shortened significantly. Quicker access to key data will allow BTO to better understand emerging trends, as well as gauge the effectiveness of marketing efforts. Air Access - Ensure greater competition on domestic routes The government has invited domestic operators to submit Expressions of Interests for scheduled domestic routes. Favorable conditions should be offered in order to elicit interest among the 13 companies currently offering non-scheduled service in Botswana. However, if none are able to provide the service under conditions specified by the government, strong consideration should be given to opening routes to foreign operators. Box 2: MCC Tourism Program in Namibia As part of the US$304 million in funding that Namibia is receiving from the United States’ Millennium Challenge Corporation, around $67 million is for tourism support. Of that amount, roughly US$8 million has been designated for marketing. One of the principal components is the creation and implementation of an online marketing plan largely geared towards the North American market. Implementation will likely include the following elements: Utilization of innovative destination marketing tools such as iPad apps, digital travel planners, and GPS-integrated devices Building the capacity of the Namibia Tourism Board to better understand the utilization of electronic and social media Developing a social marketing campaign (through sites such as Facebook and twitter) in partnership with zoos to promote tourism and conservation activities Developing and marketing itineraries that showcase locally developed and managed experiences This campaign, to be implemented from 2012-2013, should significantly strengthen Namibia’s position with the FIT market. It will also provide a good model which can be followed by regional competitors. Sources: MCA (2011) and Solimar International (2011) Encourage long-haul flights into Gaborone Botswana has already signed bilateral agreements with over 20 countries, including India and UAE. It should therefore aggressively pursue long-haul flights from carriers such as Air India and Emirates. Luring these carriers would likely involve offering various incentives. The most important of these would be fifth freedom rights, which allows carriers to fly between two foreign countries on journeys that originate or end in the carrier’s home country. Training - Create hotel/lodge-based training school The principal recommendation of the training needs analysis commissioned by BTO in 2009 was that a “Tourism and Hospitality Center of Excellence� was needed to address the identified skill 98 Gabotlale, B. (2006) “Botswana to Benefit from Chinese Windfall,� Mmegi Online, 5/8/2006, Gaborone. http://www.mmegi.bw/2006/May/Monday8/274371471408.html 110 and knowledge gaps.99 It would have three components: 1) Training Safari Lodge, 2) Hospitality and Culinary School, and 3) Mobile Training Unit. The training lodge, based in a functioning facility in one of the country’s principal tourist areas, would focus on camp management, safari guiding, and conservation. The hospitality and culinary school should be attached to a real hotel, or at least be based in well-equipped training facilities that allow for practical, hands-on learning (e.g. the Francistown College of Technical and Vocational Education). Finally, the mobile training unit would travel across the country providing short courses and seminars and training skills (for in-house trainers). All of these suggestions have great merit. They would not only help fill major gaps, but could help establish Botswana as a regional tourism training hub. A recommendation to establish the training school was forwarded to the government after the study was released but shelved due to insufficient funds. The proposal is reportedly being studied again through the Botswana Education Hubs initiative. If the school is approved, there are some hospitality/tourism training institutions models in the region that could be utilized. It may even be possible to bring in one as a partner, either on an advisory basis or through a deeper partnership. A few possibilities would be Kenya Utalii College or Cape Technicon Hotel School. - Streamline BOTA training fund reimbursement process In order for this potentially valuable program to be accessed by the private sector, the reimbursement process must be made more efficient. Additionally, a transparent process must be put in place to ensure that qualified in-house trainers can become accredited. This will serve as an incentive for companies to utilize in-house trainers, which can have a profound impact on service quality. Visas - Reduce restrictions for work visas As discussed earlier, current gaps in local labor create the need for some foreign labor. If a hospitality/ tourism training school is created, this could eventually eliminate the need to employ foreign staff. However, this will not happen immediately. Therefore enabling qualified foreign staff to come in the short to medium-term is still critical for the industry to be able to maintain the high standards required by its clientele. Foreign staff should be considered a training resource for building local capacity. - Streamline tourist visa applications for key emerging markets Reducing the processing time for tourist visa applications to one week will remove an important deterrent for some prospective tourists. With sufficient manpower and efficient processes, one week should be enough time to adequately vet tourist visa applications. Streamlining visa applications will also help stimulate intra-regional travel, as some tourists planning trips through Southern Africa now bypass Botswana due to visa delays. - Continue effort to establish common SADC tourist visa In 1998, all SADC countries signed the Protocol on the Development of Tourism, which called for the establishment of a common “UNIVISA�.100 Yet development of the program has stalled for many years and seems a long way off. A special effort could therefore be made to improve ease of access between the Botswana, Namibia, Zambia and Zimbabwe. The introduction of a single, special tourist visa that could be approved and purchased in advance of the visit at a foreign office of any of the f countries and that will provide access to all these countries. (BIDPA/World Bank, 2005) 99 Botswana Tourism Organization (2009) Training Needs Analysis of Botswana’s Tourism Industry. Study prepared by Deloitte, Gaborone. 100 RETOSA (2011a) The Tourist Visa (UNIVISA) http://www.retosa.co.za/regional-initiatives/tourist-visa 111 Conservation Continue fence removal to protect dwindling wildlife populations Increasingly cognizant of the detrimental effect of fences on wildlife populations, the government has removed several fences in the past few years. Studies have shown that removal of these fences has led to relatively fast regeneration of key species. In light of recent studies indicating alarming rates of decline of some species, the government needs to take a harder look at its fencing policy, considering optimal land use options across the country. In considering which fences may be removed, several areas should be prioritized: First, the wildlife corridor between the southwest part of the Makgadikgadi Pans National Park and the Central Kalahari Game Reserve could be restored through strategic fence removal; this would not only help spur increases in wildlife populations, but also open new tourism opportunities that will create local jobs and further diversify the country’s tourism offer. Two other priorities for removal would be fences around the Okavango panhandle and those between Botswana and the Caprivi Strip, which cut off wildlife migration that extends into Angola. Coordination - Form Integrated Tourism Planning Committee Creation of this high-level committee across key ministries and departments will help signal that tourism is a national priority. The objective of the committee would be to ensure broad government coordination. It would be useful to form technical sub-committees that allow for ongoing collaboration in areas that have been previously discussed in this document. Potential sub-committees are listed in Table 3. It would be essential to include private sector representation in these committees. Table 3: Potential Tourism Technical Sub-Committees Issue Relevant Tourism Body Other Relevant Government Bodies Land Access BTO Department of Lands, Department of Environment Affairs, Department of Wildlife and National Parks Statistics DOT Department of Immigration and Citizenship, CSO, Bank Collection of Botswana Visas DOT Department of Immigration and Citizenship, Department of Labour and Social Security Training BTO, DOT BOTA, Ministry of Education and Skills Development, Botswana Education Hub Community BTO, DOT Department of Wildlife and National Parks, Department Tourism of Environment Affairs, Department of Lands, Department of Local Government Planning, Department of Forestry and Range Resources, Department of National Museums and Monuments - Create local destination management committees These should include representatives of the local government, private sector, communities, relevant NGOs, and local tourism training institutions, in addition to local DOT or BTO branches. Logical pilot areas would be the Okavango Delta (based in Maun) and Chobe (based in Kasane). Collaborative efforts might include: private sector (perhaps with the public sector) undertaking joint marketing campaigns; private sector better linking with community tourism enterprises; members of the private sector sharing data; private sector working with training institutions to help make curricula more relevant; private sector; businesses jointly organizing specific training courses for employees; joint advocacy campaigns. At some point, the committees could evolve into Destination Management Organizations (DMOs), which generally have paid employees and an annual budget for activities such as marketing and training. This would increase effectiveness of destination initiatives, but also entail payment of annual membership fees. 112 113 Chapter 6: Promoting Exports to Spur Diversification Botswana’s export pattern is unusual for a middle income country in three respects: comparatively few firms export, these exports reach only a relatively few markets and the survival rate of new exports in foreign markets is on average unusually low. Only 10 percent of firms export any products at all. Botswana sells in only 2 percent of markets that import its products. And only 40 percent of its exports survive into a second year. Improving these statistics fall in large measure on the shoulders of the export promotion agencies. Export promotion agencies confront several challenges. At present, Botswana has nearly a dozen agencies whose mandate is, directly or indirectly, related to export diversification. Coordinating them is one challenge. A second challenge is establishing the right balance of public interventions moving through the export chain – from supporting firms in the export readiness phase, through market penetration, to survival and growth. This is difficult because the export base outside of minerals is small and comprised mainly of small firms. A third and fourth set of challenges concern trade financing and the revamping of the logistics networks. SEZs may contribute to solutions in the long-term, but are not a panacea. Rather, policy adjustments – and institutional reforms in all of these dimensions - can raise the productivity of public investments in export promotion, and be requited with greater productivity gains for the economy. Export Promotion Institutions Botswana Export Development and Investment Authority (now BITC) The Botswana Export Development and Investment Authority (BEDIA) is the main institution responsible for export promotion in Botswana. BEDIA was established in 1997 as an autonomous agency of the Ministry of Trade and Industry, with a joint public and private sector board. Its aim is to “encourage, promote, and facilitate the establishment of export-oriented enterprises�. BEDIA has responsibility for investment promotion and aftercare, export promotion (including developing new exporters and helping existing exporters to expand), and policy advocacy. As part of its role it also develops and rents industrial facilities (factory shells) for use by domestic and foreign investors. Finally, BEDIA has recently been given responsibility to manage “Brand Botswana�, the nation-marketing effort, which aims to promote Botswana as a place to invest, visit, work, and live. In 2012, BEDIA merged with IFSC to become the Botswana Investment Trade Centre (BITC). Within BEDIA’s portfolio, export promotion has a relatively prominent position, judging by the resources devoted to it (see Table 1). While in 2010, BEDIA devoted substantially higher resources to investment promotion than export promotion, this was largely due to its inability to spend according to budget plans for the Enterprise Development Program. In 2009 the expenditure on export and investment promotion was much the same. Moreover, including the net expenditure on the Global Expo – BEDIA’s annual business-to-business marketing exhibition – arguably BEDIA devotes the largest share of its budget to export promotion. Aside from the Global Expo, BEDIA’s export promotion efforts consist of two main activities: traditional export promotion and export enterprise development. Traditional export promotion focuses on raising awareness among non-exporters and existing exporters of export opportunities in key markets and helping to facilitate exports through market information, contact creation, and guidance in establishing export relationships. This happens mainly through trade exhibitions and 114 inbound / outbound contact promotion missions. At the moment, these activities remain the mainstay of export promotion efforts in Botswana, and receive the majority of BEDIA’s export promotion budget (more than 80% in 2010, although it was only around 65% in 2009). While export promotion missions included Europe and the US, 7 of 11 export promotion missions conducted in the past two years targeted SADC countries. Table 1: Summary of BEDIA financial statement 2010 % revenue 2009 % revenue Total Revenue 92,288,260 75,914,454 Of which govt grant 76,840,832 83% 51,612,911 68% Expenses 2010 2009 Investment promotion 3,284,761 6% 3,456,864 6% Export promotion 1,371,473 3% 3,047,286 6% Aftercare 39,309 0% 40,336 0% Public relations 2,518,636 5% 3,151,800 6% Research 1,448,383 3% 5,758,579 10% Staff 22,396,836 43% 18,925,863 34% Global Expo 6,726,652 13% 8,118,315 15% Administration 11,923,187 23% 9,890,669 18% Other* 2,791,963 5% 2,591,601 5% Total 52,501,200 54,981,313 % of govt grant 68% 107% % of revenue 57% 72% * Depreciation, amortization of intangibles, and foreign exchange loss Source: BEDIA Annual Report (2010) The other platform of BEDIA’s export promotion is its Export Enterprise Development Program (EDP). This program responds the need for deeper attention to the export development challenge in Botswana: beyond simply raising awareness and promoting potential and existing exporters, there is a need to focus on building enterprises that have the capability to compete in export markets. Outlined in the National Export Strategy, EDP focuses on helping pre-selected companies gain practical experience in improving productivity and innovation, including in production, design, standards packaging, and other aspects of the business; and only after this, to start developing strategies and tactics for entering export markets. The program is mainly targeted to the manufacturing sector. BEDIA targets firms with at least ten staff that are deemed to have the potential to grow from micro-level to small-medium level and have expressed a particular interest in exporting (e.g. by participating in trade fairs). An extensive pre-program audit is undertaken to identify the specific needs of these firms. International Financial Services Centre The International Financial Services Centre (IFSC) is responsible for investment and export promotion in Botswana’s second main services sector. Established in 2003 and armed with a generous set of incentives, including reduced corporation tax (15%), exemption from capital gains and withholding tax, and zero-rated VAT, the IFSC aims to establish Botswana as an offshore financial and business services hub (see Chapter 2). Prior to IFSC, BEDIA had at least nominal responsibility for promotion of the financial services sector (although in practice there was limited focus on this sector). In 2010, a decision was taken to merge IFSC and BEDIA to consolidate investment promotion activities and improve coordination. In 2011, government formalized the merger in a law creating the establishment of the Botswana Investment and Trade Centre (BITC). A merger taskforce has 115 been established, and a study has been initiated to determine the organizational design of the future institution. However, decisions about leadership and operating model have yet to be made, and so BEDIA and IFSC continue to operate with very different organizations strategies. The IFSC relies largely on a small internal team, with most technical support outsourced, while BEDIA manages most of its activities through its own staff. Botswana Tourism The Botswana Tourism Organization (BTO) plays the role of the investment and export promotion agency (as well as the regulator101) for the country’s largest services export sector – tourism. The agency was established by an Act of Parliament in 2004 (but was only operational in 2006) in order to complement the activities of the Ministry of Environment, Wildlife and Tourism – specifically to be able to serve the sector in a quicker and more customer-focused way. BTO has a mandate to address marketing and positioning of the country for the tourism segment, and investment promotion. Prior to BTO’s establishment, BEDIA maintained responsibility for promotion of the tourism sector. The bulk of BTO’s activities to support exports are focused on traditional promotion, such as subsidizing stands at exhibitions. Like BEDIA, however, BTOO is looking to provide greater support to enterprise-level competitiveness. Recent seminars with tourism SMMEs have identified that the challenges they face are similar to those in the industrial sector – in this sense they are not tourism-specific concerns but rather issues with general managerial, marketing, and commercial skills. According to BTO, until recently LEA had specific programs to support the SMME sector, but their focus has shifted much more toward agriculture so there is now a gap in the support to tourism SMMEs. As yet, however, BTO has no program in place like BEDIA’s EDP and it lacks the resources to invest in such a program. Botswana Export Credit Insurance While export finance instruments (e.g. working capital, pre-export loans, and letters of credit) are available through commercial banks in Botswana, the main export finance institution is Botswana Export Credit Insurance (BECI). Established as a company in 1996 through Botswana Development Corporation (BDC), BECI’s objective was to support the export-enabling environment by providing insurance against counterparty and political risk (mainly to clients in the garment sector). Following the phase-out of the FAP program (whose beneficiaries were largely in the textile and garments sector), however, BECI’s export customers declined significantly. As a result BECI expanded its offering to the domestic sector; now, a minority of its customers is exporters – a handful of packaging and metals products companies selling mainly into South Africa and Namibia. Other institutions with export promotion roles Several other institutions in Botswana have some role to play in supporting the export sector, although they may not have a specific export mandate (Table 2). Promotion Challenges Across the Export Chain To assess the effectiveness of Botswana’s efforts to promote diversified exports, Figure 1 presents a simplified three step chain of export development: i) pre-export readiness: the process by which a firm reaches the point of growth and productivity that exporting becomes a realistic opportunity; ii) market penetration: the process by which a firm first enters into the export market; and iii) survival and growth: the process by which firms maintain their position in export 101 In the sense that BT provides quality assurance through the grading of tourism venues and operators. 116 markets and introduce new products and/or enter new markets. What is clear is that Botswana’s exporters (and therefore, its export promotion institutions) face significant challenges in all three phases of the export chain. These challenges are both structural and policy induced. Table 2: Overview of secondary institutions involved in export promotion102 Role Relevance for export promotion Government agencies Local Enterprise Promoting entrepreneurship Enterprise Competitiveness Authority (LEA) and enterprise development in Development Strategy has SMEs through business support “promoting exports� as one of and technical assistance its aims; has an “export promotion program� Citizen Subsidized financing for Among objectives, identifies Entrepreneurship citizen-owned firms provision of financing through Development equity credit guarantees for Agency (CEDA) establishing a presence in foreign markets Botswana Bureau of Responsible for standardization Services to exporters to meet Standards (BOBS) and quality control in international quality standards; Botswana also set standards for imported inputs Autonomous, government-owned agencies Botswana Autonomous, government- Most investments depend on Development owned investment company: exports for viability – involved Corporation (BDC) industrial, commercial, in major export-oriented agribusiness, and services investments (e.g. float glass investments factory) Botswana National Parastatal focused on No specific role, but Enterprise Productivity Centre improving competitiveness of Support Services has similar (BNPC) public and private institutions role to some of BEDIA (as through training, research, well as LEA and CEDA) information, and technical technical support assistance Industry representative bodies Botswana Employers association, with Services to support Confederation of large membership base; diversification and exporting, Commerce, represents interests of business including training and Industry, and to government, trade unions, organizing trade and Manpower and other stakeholders investment missions (BOCCIM) Botswana Exporters Private business association Services to exporters include and Manufacturers representing mainly SME assistance in registration, Association (BEMA) exporters and manufacturers market and technical information, training, and consultancy Pre-export readiness: small firms thrown in at the deep end? Recent research has shown that exporters are significantly more productive than domestic firms (e.g., Bernard and Jensen, 1999; Melitz, 2003). While some of this productivity arises from learning in export markets, these studies argue that in most cases productive firms “self-select� into exporting. The normal progression is that a firm grows and becomes increasingly productive 102 “Secondary� refers to the fact that these institutions have a role to play in export promotion, but it is not their primary focus, in contrast to BEDIA, Botswana Tourism, IFSC, and BECI, who have mandates focused on exports and investment. 117 by competing in its domestic market and then reaches a point where it can compete in global (usually first, regional) markets. But clearly not all domestic markets offer the same scope for nurturing firms to become competitive. This is particularly the case in countries – like Botswana – with small domestic markets. Among the important determining factors in productivity is scale. On the way to growing to reach productive scale, Botswana’s firms soon reach the limits of the local market. This gives SMEs an incentive to start exporting, but it also means they are forced to enter export markets at an earlier stage than would companies with a much larger domestic market to exploit (e.g. in South Africa). Thus, they face the challenge of going up against globally competitive firms in export markets when they are still at a relatively small stage of development. As Figure 2 indicates, nearly 90% of operating firms in the formal sector in Botswana have less than 30 staff. Even with its small share of exporters, this indicates that a significant number of firms with less than 30 staff (still SMEs) are exporters. Figure 1: Acute challenges across the export chain • Incentive to export (Pre-) Export • Domestic market scale and firm size Readiness • Productivity challenge Market • Small and narrow existing base offers penetration little potential to leverage success • In addition to firm-level productivity Survival and challenges, new exporters face growth constraints in key areas like finance and trade logistics Source: Author The implications of having a large share of small firms entering into the export sector is that they are more likely to struggle to survive, much less expand, in export markets. Indeed, they are particularly vulnerable in the first few years of exporting. Figure 3, which shows the three-year survival rate of Botswana’s exporters segmented by size103, illustrates this challenge starkly. Botswana’s largest exporters have survival rates above 70%, on par with countries like South Africa and even OECD countries. By contrast, the large majority of exporters (mainly SMEs) have survival rates of around 30% - i.e. less than one in three of these firms remain an exporter after three years. Figure 2: Firm size distribution in Botswana >100 2% 50-99 3% 30-49 6% 5-29 42% <5 47% 0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% Source: Author’s calculation based on data from World Bank Enterprise Surveys (2010) and CSO (2005 Industry Census) 103 While there are no data matching firm size (e.g. employees or assets) directly with export volumes we proxy this relationship in Figure 3 by segmenting exporters based on the size of exports. Three groups of exporters are shown here: the top 5% of exporters; exporters in the5th to 20th percentile; and the remaining 80th percentile (i.e. the rest). 118 Figure 3: Survival rates for Botswana’s exporters – segmented by size Kaplan-Meier survival estimates (exporting firms, 2003-2005) 1.00 0.75 Top 5% 0.50 Bottom 80% 0.25 0.00 0 1 2 3 analysis time smallest exporters medium size exporters largest exporters Source: Author’s calculation based on Botswana customs data The SMME sector in Botswana has deep gaps in its competitiveness. According to the World Bank (2011), Botswana’s SMMEs face serious constraints in terms of access to finance, skills shortages, and construction-related infrastructure. Another recent study which surveyed more than 300 SMMEs for LEA (LEA, 2009) suggested that while many firms required basic business knowledge and systems, including strategic planning and financial management, even those that had such systems in place faced significant structural hurdles to growth and export participation. Market penetration: little leverage from the existing base Even assuming firms are productive enough to be considered “export ready�, they face significant challenges in entering export markets. Exporters not only face tangible costs of packaging, transport, and possibly tariffs and standards, but they also face significant “information costs� in starting to export. For example, they must learn about the product and service preferences of export markets and the procedures for packing, shipping, and dealing with all trade-related paperwork; they must also locate and negotiate reliable business partners and arrange financing for the shipments. All of these impose risk and costs for exporters – what are traditionally referred to in the trade literature as “fixed costs of exporting�. An important finding from the recent research on firm-level export performance in Africa (Cadot et al, 2011) is that the likelihood of firm entry and survival in export markets is strongly linked to having an existence base of firms from the same sector selling in the same market. This is because much of the information learned through “pioneer� exporters benefits future exporters, lowering the fixed cost of market entry. In Botswana’s case, export market penetration is made more difficult by the fact that it lacks a broad and deep base of exporters, thus offering little opportunity to lower fixed costs through information spillovers. According to customs transaction data, just 1,866 firms exported, mostly on a smalls scale. Only 537 (non-diamond) firms exported an annual value of more than P100,000. More importantly, these larger exporter are concentrated in commodity areas that operate largely outside the existing trade promotion channels. As illustrated in Figure 4, more than 60% of goods and services exports are in diamonds and ores. Outside of minerals, the largest goods exports are in clay, lime, and salt-related products (mainly from Botswana Ash), which operate based on commodity contracts, and beef, which is exported through an independent marketing channel (BMC). 119 Hausmann and Klinger (2010) analyze this same problem in terms of the “product space�. They note that Botswana’s production structure concentrated in mineral clusters is less conducive to easy adaptation of firm skills and capabilities to similar products than that of other, more diversified middle-income countries. Exports other than minerals include textiles (a sector widely seen to be in terminal decline) and a collection of small, “eclectic� exporters (Grynberg, 2011) which are sold almost exclusively to the South African market and encompass a handful of firms who appear to have managed to compete in export markets across a wide range of different, often niche, products. This export base appears to be driven more by firm-specific characteristics than by any comparative advantage that is inherent to Botswana. In fact Grynberg (2011) points out that the successful non-traditional exporters are actually selling products that would seem counterintuitive to anyone with knowledge of Botswana: boats (in a landlocked country); foam (in high transport cost environment); furniture (with limited access to wood); chewing gum (with no local production of any inputs). Figure 4: Narrow sectoral scope and idiosyncratic exporters ? Services 26% Other goods Electr dist equip 9 1% 7% X Apparel and footwear 1% Beef X 1% Clay, lime, salt 2% Diamonds and ores 62% Source: Author’s calculation based on data from Comtrade and UNCTAD This product structure makes the task of export promotion institutions that much more difficult. The first set of large minerals exporters needs little assistance, but also has relatively limited potential to pull along other exporters with them. The second set of existing exporters, encompassing mainly beef and garments is facing existential crisis. The third set of “eclectic� exporters is also struggling to remain competitive in export markets, and appears to offer little scope for replication, either by other companies in the same sector or by exporters more widely. Thus, rather than focusing on broadening and deepening export penetration in existing strong sectors, export promotion institutions will be forced to put additional attention to assisting not just new firms, but entirely new (or relatively undeveloped) sectors to enter export markets. Survival and growth: structural and policy-induced challenges to export competitiveness Finally, once firms are established in export markets, the challenge is to maintain and grow their position, both at the intensive margin (selling more of the same products to the same markets) as well as expanding at the extensive margin (introducing new products and/or entering new markets). Here, Botswana’s exporters face not only the structural problems outlined previously in 120 this section, but also policy-induced ones. A wide range of constraints to export competitiveness are discussed in other chapters of this report; here we focus briefly on two that tend to have a significant impact even on established exporters: trade finance and trade logistics. Trade Finance- Working Capital As indicated in the National Export Strategy, getting access to working capital loans at a reasonable rate seems to be problematic. One exporter reported that an audit of the CEDA program found that in virtually every case, working capital needs were significantly underestimated. And as BEDIA describes trade finance as an issue that has been “overlooked� by Botswana’s trade support institutions – none of the development finance organizations (including BECI and the National Development Bank) provide working capital loans, and rates from commercial banks can be as much as 10% above the prime rate, with high collateral requirements for small firms. Moreover, commercial banks are seen to have little appetite for the manufacturing sector and little understanding of the needs of the agricultural sector, the two main channels for export-oriented diversification in Botswana. Box 1: The OSEG Group: BPO pioneer for Botswana or another eclectic exporter? The OSEG Group started in 2003 with only four staff as an outsourced collections service for the mobile phone operator, Masscom. In 2005, they decided to expand their range of “front end� services to include outbound and inbound call centre activities, picking up contracts with a range of banks and mobile phone operators. Since then, OSEG has expanded rapidly and now employ 150 staff in Botswana. They have also expanded their service offering beyond traditional BPO to include financial services for SMEs, including factoring services. Recognizing the limited size of the local market, OSEG has in recent years begun to take steps to participate in export markets. In 2009, they set up a call centre in Namibia in 2009, which now employs 50 staff and services the Namibian market – they are also looking to use the Namibian base to target call centre business from German firms in Europe. Similarly, OSEG has begun to pursue potential opportunities of taking on business (in its Botswana base) for clients in the UK, US, and Germany, although the high cost of IP telephony in Botswana restricts this potential at the moment. Finally, OSEG has been in discussions about the possibility of establishing a fairly large joint-venture call centre in the Northwest Province of South Africa. OSEG is exactly the kind of firm that Botswana hopes to see replicated many times over. Started by a local entrepreneur – Majakathata Pheko – with some seed funding from CEDA, but taking the initiative to invest, grow and seek out regional and global market opportunities. Most importantly, OSEG represents the potential to create moderately skilled employment opportunities for young people in Botswana. BECI’s insurance product is used primarily as a substitute for letters of credit (L/Cs) by smaller exporters trying to break into markets through new export relationships, partly to cover risk and partly to avoid having to request that (usually much larger, South African) buyer sets up an L/C. However, even among the limited export base in Botswana, take up of export credit insurance is low, and of its newer factoring product, much lower104. This is in part due to the perception of high cost (usually around 1.5% for insurance). More importantly, however, BECI feels there is insufficient promotion of the product by commercial banks, who could package it to mitigate risk in their working capital loans. Similarly, they note the need for more institutionalized cooperation with BEDIA to promote trade finance instruments – they note that at the moment “the appreciation of the product comes with individual officers, but it is not institutionalized." Trade facilitation Transport costs and time have long been identified as among the most important constraints to competitiveness for Botswana’s non-minerals exporters. Botswana’s distant location from market, its landlocked status, and its lack of scale not only raise transport costs, but make delivery reliability difficult to guarantee. The structural problems with transport are aggravated by 104 Note that factoring is a relatively new product in Botswana, but aside from BECI it has also been introduced by the OSEG Group. 121 inefficient border operations, and in particular by restrictions (both in policy and de facto105) that prevent efficient regional transport operations. The poor transport environment has significant implications for the potential for Botswana’s firms to be competitive in many export sectors. For example, in the apparel sector, Botswana is increasingly unable to compete on price with competition from Asia. Maintaining a competitive edge in this market requires quick, reliable delivery. But Botswana’s location and its difficult transport environment means it tends to lose out in this market to North African and Eastern European suppliers in Europe and Caribbean suppliers in the US. Effectiveness of export promotion: performance and constraints BEDIA’s performance: doing the right things but not getting results For export promotion, BEDIA seems to be following established international practice in terms of their market and sector focus, the management of their resources, and the delivery of their services. BEDIA puts significant effort into providing market information and to developing in- depth training modules for exporters. On both of these activities, exporters report satisfaction with the services BEDIA provides. The increasing emphasis on building enterprise competitiveness is also in line with global best practices and, more importantly, with the needs of Botswana. Tactically, BEDIA is making relatively effective use of their embassies to leverage their reach into global markets, bearing in the mind the need to focus on markets where investment and exports are most likely. No doubt, there are areas in which BEDIA could improve their tactics and delivery; for example, in developing contacts for trade missions and in post- mission follow-up. The main concerns raised about BEDIA is that there is a gap between their efforts at setting up trade missions, which they are seen to do effectively, and actually facilitating quality leads on the ground. But by and large, BEDIA’s implementation is appropriate to its objectives. For investment promotion, reviews are mixed. Many new and potential investors question whether BEDIA is able to deliver on what it promises. In this context, one of the key challenges for BEDIA is its lack of authority to fulfill its role as a “one stop shop�. At the moment, BEDIA has been given this responsibility, but lacks the authority to compel other ministries and agencies to comply – indeed, they can simply facilitate approvals but have no mandate to actually make decisions. Finally, one of the limitations of BEDIA from a diversification perspective has been its almost exclusive focus on the manufacturing sector. Certainly, BEDIA would bring services sectors along on its external missions, but it had no expertise or focus on these sectors. Until the recent (ongoing) merger with IFSC, most of the main service sectors were the responsibility of other agencies: tourism under Botswana Tourism, finance and business services under IFSC, and knowledge-intensive services recently being picked up under the Innovation Hub. Thus, the scope of services activities that remain tend to be narrow and include sectors that are unlikely to be major sources of exports or FDI. Despite BEDIA’s efforts and the generally positive view of their performance, as the data on export trends shows, their success has been limited; this is evident in the discussion and statistics presented in Chapter 1 and recounted in the introduction to this Chapter. Seen from a different perspective, the amount of non-mineral exports per US dollar of export promotion expenditure106 is relatively low (Figure 5). 105 including restrictions on third-party cabotage, inspections, and police stops in South Africa. 106 Note that the figure for export promotion expenditure is estimated based on BEDIA’s 2010 Annual Report (see Table 1). It takes a conservative estimate that approximately one-third of BEDIA’s budget (including staff, administrative, and overheads) is devoted to export promotion and two-thirds is devoted to investment promotion. In fact, in previous years the split have been closer to 50/50 between the activities. 122 The panel in Figure 5 shows a wide range of export promotion efficiency, ranging from just over US$200 in Zambia to almost US$3,000 in Peru. The global average based on the World Bank’s export promotion survey (Lederman, Olarreaga, and Payton, 2009) is around US$900 for all exports, which translates to around US$750-800 of non-mineral exports. In this context, Botswana compares relatively poorly at US$558. Figure 5: Non-mineral exports per US$ export promotion expenditure $3,500 $3,000 $2,865 $2,500 $2,018 $2,000 $1,747 $1,500 $1,137 $900 $862 $1,000 $558 $500 $202 $- Peru Uganda Finland Chile Tanzania South Botswana Zambia Africa (est) Source Authors calculation based on data from World Bank Export Promotion Survey; BEDIA Annual Report (Botswana); and IDB (2010). Export Promotion Agencies in Latin America and the Caribbean: An Institutional Portrait Limited capacity and technical expertise hamper delivery of support One of the critiques from industry of both BEDIA and LEA is that they lack the technical expertise, in particular the sector knowledge, to deliver effective enterprise support. While this is seen to be the case across the board, it is particularly felt outside the agricultural sector, and most acutely in services sectors. In the case of LEA, there have long been complaints that its officers are too young, and lacking both sector specific knowledge as well as general business experience. The result is thought to be a bias toward providing basic support in business plan development for micro entrepreneurs, over working with established firms to help them grow to a stage where they may be ready to start planning for exports. In the case of BEDIA, only two staff are dedicated to the EDP program internally. This may not necessarily be a major hindrance, however, as BEDIA has relied on using external expertise with very specific technical knowledge, while BEDIA staff plays mainly a coordinating role. The approach has in fact been perceived as a real strength of BEDIA relative to the LEA approach. One implication of this is, of course, that significantly more resources need to be made available to fund external consultants and service providers (perhaps through a reallocation of existing export promotion budgets). Aside from resources, a challenge is the lack of sufficient expertise in the local business development services (BDS) market to deliver the specific expertise required. Lack of coordination hinders effectiveness and efficiency Because of the large number of institutions dealing with export promotion, overlapping institutional mandates, and the low density of the potential exporter base, coordination is a challenge. Coordination has been effective where institutions recognize each other’s relative technical strengths. In this context, most institutions report that they have developed an effective working relationship with BEDIA, at least with regard to BEDIA’s investment promotion role. 123 For example, BTO relies on BEDIA for “awareness raising� for investment promotion; and BDC and the Agriculture Hub both report working closely with BEDIA to identify investment opportunities and facilitate investment partnerships. The ongoing process to merge IFSC with BEDIA will at least help to consolidate the institutions that have a pure investment and export promotion mandate. At the same time, however, the Diamond Hub and the Innovation Hub are building separate, sector-specific institutions whose primary role will be investment and export promotion; so the existence of parallel institutions is being replicated. It is quite possible that similar institutions will be built up as part of the development of other of the hub initiatives. The future development of SEZs may result in yet another regulatory and promotion institution. In the area of enterprise and export development, BEDIA, LEA, and CEDA all provide enterprise support services, and all claim to have at least some mandate or interest in supporting exports. According to reports from firms, each has little idea of what the other agencies are planning and doing. For example, Botswana Tourism complained that CEDA was granting funding to tourism SMMEs without BTO even being aware of the applications. Similarly, CEDA, LEA, and the Ministry of Agriculture’s extension services are all aiming to provide similar services to small- scale farmers. While MOUs are in place across many of the public sector institutions delivering business development services, in most instances they are apparently not being enforced and no measures were being taken to make strategic use of one another’s resources (LEA, 2009). Special Economic Zones: Can They Help?107 The government has contemplated setting up SEZs since 2008. While industrial parks and factory shells exist throughout Botswana, including those run by private developers, BDC, and BEDIA, the country has yet to set up an SEZs. There is also no legal or regulatory framework through which to support such zones. Nonetheless, The National Export Strategy provides for “economic laboratories� to be set up in SEZs. BEDIA has been given the role of Authority of the proposed SEZ on an interim basis. For the SEZs to make a difference, they would need either to reduce significantly input costs or offer a substantial fiscal incentive. Assuming exports are for SACU markets, Botswana will not likely be able to reduce costs by eliminating duties or VAT on inputs. Reducing transport costs in any substantial way is also unlikely. If the zones were able to build a significant agglomeration of manufacturers, then availability of local inputs and the creation of two-way logistics flows would reduce both input and transport costs, potentially making the argument for manufacturing in Botswana more compelling. But Botswana would have to lower costs to sufficiently to become competitive with Lesotho, Swaziland, and Mozambique. That said, an SEZ might help Botswana develop niche markets in high value to weight ratio manufacturing, services associated with a regional transport hub, minerals beneficiation, corporate headquarters, or even for agriculture and its services if land use constraints could be overcome. But to be successful in any one of these activities, Botswana has to be willing to experiment with several investment climate reforms. These could include, for example, loosening the restrictions on land, speeding up trading licenses, providing more flexible work permits for skilled foreign workers, improving speed of construction permits, and providing access to world class telecommunication and electricity supplies at prices more competitive than in the rest of SACU. To date, the government has yet to design a strategy for SEZs, decide on the nature of policy experimentation, or formulate a draft law for their implementation. In the next section, we suggest policy options for doing so. 107 See Thomas Farole “Assessment of Special Economic Zones in Botswana� November, 2011 for a more extensive discussion of SEZs and their prospective role in Botswana. 124 Policy Options to Improve Effectiveness of Export Promotion To improve the effectiveness of Botswana’s export promotion, the government may wish to consider several options. These include: Support the strategic shift of BEDIA to new sectors beyond manufacturing, specifically embracing services and agriculture. Manufacturing has long been at the heart of Botswana’s diversification efforts, but this strategy is increasingly being called into question. Agribusiness, services, and minerals beneficiation are now much higher on the agenda. This will have implications for BEDIA, which has spent a decade building up some expertise in the manufacturing sector and has, over this period, essentially surrendered its role in the services sector to other organizations like IFSC, Botswana Tourism, and the Innovation Hub. Indeed, the process is already beginning, with the agreed merger of IFSC and BEDIA to form the BITC. But like any merger, the decision to combine organizations is just the start of the process. Within the services sector, it will also require the new organization to go beyond the scope of the former IFSC to embrace a range of potentially exportable services sectors. As part of this, it will be important for the new organizations to establish close, formal working arrangements with the hub initiatives. Delivering sector-targeted strategies will also require developing effective working relationships with sector-specific institutions (especially private sector associations), where these exist. International best practice in export promotion shows that export promotion strategies and activities are normally developed in close collaboration with industry bodies. Shift and expand resources to scale up the Export Enterprise Development Program (EDP) to provide greater support to improving competitiveness for incipient exporters. BEDIA has correctly recognized the limitation on the existing export base, and has rightly opted to start further up the export promotion value chain. Resources devoted to the EDP remain limited. Within BEDIA, aside from the Global Expo, traditional trade promotion activities – i.e. inward and outward trade missions – absorb the majority of the export promotion budget. Even in 2009 (a more normal year) traditional activities accounted for around two-thirds of the budget, while EDP accounted for only one-third in 2009 and less than 20% in 2010. It makes sense to shift greater resources to this “front-end� of the export promotion chain (see Figure 6) and perhaps rely on greater cost-sharing from firms in later stages of the chain. Figure 6: The export promotion chain and government support Share of government co-funding Building competitiveness 100% 0% General Customized Identifying Closing export Awareness export export plan sales deals readiness development opportunities Source: Derived from Nathan Associates (2004) While BEDIA spent BWP 1.1 million on the program in 2009, it was able to disburse only 15% of that level in 2010. This is because of the 15 companies that enrolled in the program, only six 125 ultimately participated, despite the fact that there are no direct cost implications for the participating firms. Clearly, 2010 was affected by the global recession – most companies that dropped out of the program cited the recession as making their plans to export no longer viable. On the other hand, this experience also underscores the struggle BEDIA may have to deliver a significant impact with such programs, at the scale it is presently operating. Taking the 2010 experience, not only was BEDIA only able to reach six firms with the program, but five of these firms were in the same sector (crafts), with the sixth in a related one (jewelry). Unless the program is scaled up significantly, it will take decades to have any measurable impact on exports. Upgrade technical capacity in export promotion and business support agencies to deliver on the new mandate. Shifting the focus of BEDIA more toward services and toward developing export readiness has significant implications on the skills and expertise required. As indicated earlier in this note, one of the main weaknesses identified by clients of business support institutions in Botswana is the perceived lack of industry expertise of the staff. Without significant resources, it is not realistic to build an organization that has all the expertise to deal with each and every industry that Botswana exporters may participate in; it is also not possible to have the technical expertise in everything required to build firm-level competitiveness, such as production, quality control, commercial management, human resources, logistics, and marketing among others. Thus the challenge for BEDIA will be to develop some limited technical expertise in-house, while also coordinating to make effective use of expertise that exists within the local and regional business development support market. One possibility will be for BEDIA to organize around broad sectors (e.g. manufacturing, services, agriculture) or around key target sectors within these broad areas (e.g. BPO within services) and have one in-house sector expert for each. These experts should ideally have had significant expertise working in the sectors. In addition, experience from other international export promotion agencies suggests the importance of having staff with masters degrees in key functional areas like ICT, marketing, and engineering. Improve coordination among export promotion and business development support institutions to reduce overlap and facilitate movement of firms into exporting. The lack of effective coordination among business development support institutions not only results in overlap and inefficient use of budgets, but perhaps more importantly makes it more difficult to deliver effective support for incipient exporters through programs like EDP. Indeed, the decision for BEDIA to focus more on facilitating (pre) export readiness – specifically in developing more productive firms – raises questions over how far back into the value chain of the firm it is necessary to go in order to facilitate export entry, expansion, and survival, and where in this value chain does BEDIA’s own mandate and expertise begin and end. Coordination, specifically with LEA, will be critical in this process. Given LEA’s on-the-ground coverage, they may be valuable in providing information on firms that are ready to enter an EDP program, and in carrying out the necessary pre-program audits. Putting in place a formal Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) on how the organizations can work together should be the minimum step to improved coordination. Similarly, MOUs would be useful between BEDIA and the hub initiatives, to help establish joint objectives and coordinate activities. Going another step, the business development support institutions could share information (Customer Relationship Management - CRM) systems. This would help to track and coordinate the assistance given to specific clients. Adopt a matching grants program to better leverage the private business development services market, in order to more effectively scale export promotion support and align incentives of firms. As discussed in the second policy recommendation, international best practice in export promotion suggests a shift toward greater government commitment in building export readiness (specifically, here, the EDP), with a greater share of the costs being borne by individual exporters as one moves further down the export chain (see Figure 6). In fact, many export promotion organizations charge full cost recovery for the large share of export promotion support, such as developing export promotion plans and assistance in targeting specific markets. One mechanism to ensure that exporters have the incentive to share costs is to implement a matching grant 126 scheme. Such programs have been used effectively not only for export promotion activities, but more widely to facilitate the provision of business development support for SMEs. Matching grants have the added benefit that they are a source of funds and demand that can play an important role in helping to build a quality, competitive, business development support market. Expand efforts to monitor and evaluate the efficiency and impact of export promotion and industrial policy initiatives. Finally, it is clear that to date there has been little impact evaluation carried out of export promotion initiatives or of industrial policy initiatives in general (see Chapter 2). More effective targeting of scarce resources will of course rely on having a better understanding of what works and what does not, and from an industrial policy perspective, of what the costs are of the outcomes achieved. Given the important policy advocacy role of BEDIA, it seems sensible for this expertise to be placed within the organization. To realize the potential of SEZs to contribute to the export expansion effort, policy makers may wish to consider: Defining clearly the nature of the policy experiment, the strategic objectives and the economic advantages to be realized with SEZs. While the SEZ Policy sets out objectives and principles for the program, they remain too broad to be made operational at this point. Even the development of the SEZ Law, while it should be constructed to be flexible, will require more direction if it is to be made fit for purpose. Indeed, drafting the SEZ law without a complete understanding of which sectors are likely to be involved, how the SEZs would be used, and what would be their regulatory needs would be problematic. The strategy must lay out clearly which policies are to govern investment in the SEZ, and why the new policy regime might confer a competitive advantage for firms in the SEZ. For example, if the intention is to create business opportunities for SMEs through linkages, the SEZs will need to be structured in such a way to enable this, such as allowing domestic firms to invest in the SEZ. This may in turn raise other issues that the law and regulations may need to address, such as how to avoid domestic investors shifting existing activities into the SEZ legal structure and potentially depriving the fisc of tax revenues. As another example, if a key objective is to facilitate clusters or cross-sectoral linkages, it will be important to think about which clusters and sectors are likely to take advantage of such opportunities from SEZs in order to understand what implications this may have on the program design. Finally, it will be important to assess the market demand potential for the zone or zones, and to determine what level of “business case� exists – and which of the prospective niche markets authorities hope to serve through the policy changes in the zones. Move forward with all deliberate haste. It has been more than two years since the completion of the Commonwealth study, which left the government with the ingredients for the Draft Policy. In that time the policy has managed to get through Cabinet, but no further. There remains the need to draft the legislation and get it approved through Parliament, develop all the rules and regulations, amend other laws that will inevitably be impacted by the SEZ law, conduct market studies, and undertake a rigorous masterplanning process (including getting environmental approvals on planned zones). Only following this can construction proceed. Most zones take several years to develop and 5-10 more years to begin to move onto a growth path. As it is, there is little chance of the SEZs playing any real role in supporting Botswana 2016 strategy. This raises the importance of mobilizing the resources and expertise to move forward as soon as possible on the planning. At the same time, it means that the government may need to be more innovative in its approach, perhaps moving forward with a pilot (e.g. in the Botswana Innovation Hub) based on some existing legislation in the short term. Clarify the nature of BEDIA’s interim authority to design strategy and propose SEZ policy regime. There is some concern that BEDIA has been named as the interim authority and de facto responsibility for implementing the program now falls mainly to them. However they have 127 received no formal policy mandate and no additional staff or financial resources with which to support implementation. Moreover, neither the organization nor the individuals involved have had any prior experience or knowledge of SEZs. The government may need to consider seconding technical expertise into BEDIA to facilitate the implementation. Moreover, whether or not it is BEDIA, the ultimate SEZ Authority must have the resources, a clear mandate, and strong authority if it is to deliver a successful SEZ program. It is worth remembering that BEDIA is supposed be a one stop service for foreign investors at the moment. 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We use this sample of countries and eliminate the products to which they were/are dependent. This provides for the following list of exporters included in the database and the list of products dropped from their bilateral exports. Since for Botswana they do not provide the top 2 commodities, we employ the 2 top commodities using the same classification of the authors and that relate to diamond exports: industrial diamond and the category pearls and precious stones, which include also diamonds as gems). country sitc1_rev1 sitc2_rev1 Algeria Petroleum, crude and partly refined Petroleum products Benin Cotton Bolivia Gas, natural and manufactured Tin Botswana Natural abrasives incl. industrial Pearls and precious and semi precio Brazil Coffee Petroleum products Burkina Faso Live animals Cotton Burundi Coffee Tea and mate Cameroon Coffee Cocoa Central Africa Coffee Wood in the rough or roughly square republic Chile Ores & concentrates of non ferrous Copper Colombia Coffee Petroleum products Costa Rica Fruit, fresh, and nuts excl. Oil n Coffee Dominican Republic Sugar and honey Pig iron, spiegeleisen, sponge iron Ecuador Coffee Petroleum, crude and partly refined Egypt Cotton Petroleum, crude and partly refined El Salvador Sugar and honey Coffee Ethiopia Coffee Hides & skins, exc.fur skins undres Fiji Sugar and honey Gabon Wood in the rough or roughly square Petroleum, crude and partly refined Ghana Cocoa Aluminium Guatemala Coffee Crude vegetable materials, n.e.s. Indonesia Petroleum, crude and partly refined Gas, natural and manufactured Iran Petroleum, crude and partly refined Floor coverings, tapestries, etc. Iraq Fruit, fresh, and nuts excl. Oil n Petroleum, crude and partly refined Ivory Coast Coffee Cocoa Jamaica Ores & concentrates of non ferrous Inorg. chemicals elems., oxides, ha Jordan Fertilizers, crude Fertilizers manufactured Kenya Coffee Tea and mate Madagascar Coffee Spices Malawi Tea and mate Tobacco, unmanufactured 132 Mauritania Fish, fresh & simply preserved Iron ore & concentrates Mauritius Sugar and honey Clothing except fur clothing Mexico Petroleum, crude and partly refined Petroleum products Morocco Fertilizers, crude Inorg. chemicals elems., oxides, ha Niger Live animals Ores & concentrates of uranium & th Nigeria Cocoa Petroleum, crude and partly refined Paraguay Oil seeds, oil nuts and oil kernels Cotton Peru Ores & concentrates of non ferrous Petroleum products Rwanda Coffee South Africa Coal, coke & briquettes Special transactions not classd.acc Sudan Oil seeds, oil nuts and oil kernels Cotton Syria Petroleum, crude and partly refined Petroleum products Tanzania Coffee Cotton Togo Cocoa Fertilizers, crude Tunisia Petroleum, crude and partly refined Clothing except fur clothing Uganda Coffee Hides & skins, exc.fur skins undres Venezuela Petroleum, crude and partly refined Petroleum products Zambia Copper Zinc We run a gravity equation in the following form: Where is the log total exports from country o to country d, are exporter country dummies, and are importer dummies, which capture all country effects. are bilateral variables such as the log of distance, common language, common border, common languages dummies, and rta dummies. All the time variant variables are averages for the period 2005-2007. Results OLS regression b/se Ln (Distance) -1.738*** (0.047) Common RTA 0.572*** (0.102) Common Language 1.281*** (0.071) Common border 1.563*** (0.167) Colonial relationship 0.306 (0.216) r2 0.7 N 6555 Exporter and Importer dummies not reported. *** denotes 1% significance level 133 Annex 2: Estimation of Botswana vis-à-vis South African export performance The estimation is a two-steps procedure. The first step consists in running the following gravity equation of bilateral trade: Where is the log total exports from country o to country d, are exporter dummies, importer dummies, and are bilateral variables such as the log of distance, common language, common border, common languages, and rta dummy. We use as baseline category for the exporter dummies, South Africa, such as the represents the export performance of country o relative to South Africa. We then retrieve the and use them as dependent variable in the following equation: Where represents a set of explanatory of country o. We first run equation 2 using the following variables: the log of GDP, the log of pop, the log of remoteness, a landlocked dummy, and a dummy on whether the country is a traditional commodity, or natural resource exporter. These variables are the typical variable use to explain the volume of trade. Theoretically for every exporter, we should divide the explanatory variables with their respective South African values. Given that this division is applied to every country, the constant will capture them. We then retrieve the error from equation 2. The error will tell us the performance of the export of country o vis-à-vis South Africa once controlling for traditional determinants. In a second set of regressions, we add to the variables, the log of skills (defined as the percentage of the population attaining primary and secondary education), the log of the communication infrastructure index, which measures the quality of communication, and the overall LPI index (which measure the performance of the logistics). We always retrieve the errors to identify how much adding these variables explain the performance of Botswana relative to South Africa. All the variables are average of the period 2005-2007. Export values exclude diamonds and we use all the countries for which data are available. Results OLS regression (First step) b/se Ln (Distance) -1.559*** (0.028) Common RTA 0.511*** (0.059) Common Language 0.915*** (0.050) Common border 0.773*** (0.119) Colonial relationship 0.943*** (0.097) r2 0.783 N 18183 Exporter and Importer dummies not reported. *** denotes 1% significance level 134 Second step b/se b/se b/se b/se Ln GDP 1.336*** 1.231*** 0.842*** 0.457*** (0.073) (0.078) (0.152) (0.161) Ln population -0.111 -0.024 0.385** 0.615*** (0.083) (0.086) (0.164) (0.161) Ln remoteness 1.963*** 1.896*** 2.015*** 1.916*** (0.401) (0.386) (0.372) (0.311) landlocked -0.292 -0.404* -0.162 -0.289 (0.220) (0.217) (0.214) (0.194) Monoproduction - - - -0.296 0.772*** 0.808*** 0.600*** (0.203) (0.191) (0.200) (0.189) Ln (Skill) 0.872*** 0.547** 0.724*** (0.235) (0.233) (0.249) Ln 0.678*** 0.597*** (communication) (0.201) (0.216) LPI 1.472*** (0.265) r2 0.906 0.917 0.925 0.945 N 108 108 108 108 *** denotes 1% significance level, ** denotes 5% significance level, * denotes 10% significance level Performance of Botswana vis-à-vis South Africa (error from equation 2 transformed to reflect percentage difference i.e exp(error)-1). Regressions results: Botswana export performance compared to South Africa adding skills, adding skills, baseline adding skills communication communication, and lpi -46% -74% -78% -83% Source: Authors based on a two step estimation (See Annex 1). The variable represents the unexplained part o Botswana bilateral average 2005-2007 exports versus South Africa bilateral average 2005-2007 exports controlling for several characteristics. The baseline model control for the relative size of GDP, remoteness, landlocked dummy, population, commodity or resource exporter dummy. We also repeat the second step by decomposing the LPI across its component 135 d step decom Second e mposing the eq0 eq1 eq2 eq3 eq4 eq5 eq6 LPI b/se b/se b/se b/se b/se b/se b/se p Lngdp * 0.842*** * 0.727*** 0.536*** * * 0.445*** * 0.733*** 0.332* 0.501*** (0.152) (0.154) (0.160) (0.161) (0.151) (0.177) (0.160) p Lnpop 0.385** * 0.422*** 0.577*** * * 0.619*** * 0.427*** 0.726*** 0.642*** (0.164) (0.160) (0.163) (0.155) (0.160) (0.170) (0.164) moteness Lnrem * 2.015*** * 2.040*** 2.023*** * * 1.949*** * 1.904*** 1.859*** 1.836*** (0.372) (0.359) (0.338) (0.311) (0.339) (0.287) (0.317) ocked Landlo -0.162 -0.229 -0.153 -0.287 -0.247 -0.331* -0.28 (0.214) (0.202) (0.189) (0.202) (0.199) (0.194) (0.201) mm Lncom * 0.678*** * 0.600*** 0.646*** * * 0.612*** * 0.603*** 0.682*** 0.633*** (0.216) (0.209) (0.207) (0.195) (0.216) (0.204) (0.204) l Lnskill 0.547** 0.639** * 0.657*** * 0.727*** 0.511** 0.817*** 0.755*** (0.233) (0.246) (0.221) (0.263) (0.240) (0.262) (0.248) my_mono 1.dumm - - -0.416** -0.345* -0.335* -0.31 -0.322* 0.600**** 0.532**** (0.200) (0.193) (0.200) (0.191) (0.197) (0.188) (0.188) meliness lpi_tim * 0.636*** (0.201) acking_traci lpi_tra ing * 1.035*** (0.213) gistics_comp lpi_log petence * 1.303*** (0.227) ternational_ lpi_int _shipments * 1.003*** (0.242) frastructure lpi_inf e 1.212*** (0.208) stoms lpi_cus 1.103*** (0.212) r2 0.925 0.931 0.941 0.944 0.936 0.945 0.943 N 108 108 108 108 108 108 108 Performancee of Botswana vis-à-v A vis South Africa or from equ (erro ansformed to reflect uation 2 tra pe difference i. ercentage d r)-1). .e exp(error 136 Annex 3: Policies, programmes, institutions and expenditures covered Key Policies: Industrial Development Policy (1998) and draft revised Industrial Development Policy (2010); Botswana Excellence Strategy (2008); Investment Strategy for Botswana (2009), the National Trade Policy (2009), Economic Diversification Drive (2010) and the National Export Strategy (2010). Other key initiatives include the six Hub projects (Diamonds, Agriculture, Transport, Innovation, Education, and Medical) and IFSC. Credit: Citizen Entrepreneurial Development Agency (CEDA), provision of subsidised loans under various schemes to citizen owned firms, across all sectors; two other state-owned DFIs (Botswana Development Corporation and National Development Bank) providing credit on more commercial terms; BDC direct investments in specific enterprises (mostly manufacturing and property); government direct loans and guarantees to public enterprises. Government Procurement: Economic Diversification Drive (EDD) and Local Preference Scheme (LPS), which gives a price preference to locally-based companies over external suppliers; Trade Measures: infant industry protection under SACU; seasonal border closures to agricultural products to protect local farmers; Botswana Meat Commission (BMC) beef export monopoly; bans on beef imports and live cattle exports; restrictions on services imports; Institutional Support: Local Enterprise Authority (LEA), providing business and technical support to SMMEs, with a focus on agro-processing; Botswana Export Development and Investment Authority (BEDIA), providing institutional support to both exporters and inward FDI, mainly market information, promotion and also property; International Financial Services Centre (IFSC), providing institutional support and attracting FDI in offshore finance and BPO activities; Fiscal Incentives: concessional tax rate (15% compared to 22%) for manufacturing companies, IFSC-accredited companies, Innovation Hub companies; and other companies on individual approval (requested for agricultural activities); accelerated capital allowances for mining companies; Direct production subsidies: employment subsidy for textile and garment firms; Public Enterprises: Botswana Power Corporation (BPC) – de facto monopoly over electricity generation and distribution; access to government equity finance and loan guarantees; Botswana Telecommunications Corporation (BTC) – monopoly over certain telecommunications infrastructure and wholesale supplies; access to government equity finance and loan guarantees; Water Utilities Corporation (WUC) – monopoly over water supply infrastructure and services; access to government equity finance and loan guarantees; Agriculture: various subsidy and support schemes, including National Master Plan for Arable Agricultural and Dairy Development (NAMPAAD), focusing on dairy, horticulture and rain-fed farming; runs demonstration farms and assists farmers with the preparation of business plans for loan applications to financial institutions; Integrated Support Programme for Arable Agriculture Development (ISPAAD), provides heavily subsidised draught power, fertiliser, tractors, logistical support and seeds; Livestock Management and Infrastructure Development (LIMID), provides animal husbandry and fodder support, water development, poultry abattoirs; Department of Veterinary Services, vet services, infrastructure and SPS support to meet EU export market requirements; Botswana Agricultural Marketing Board (BAMB); Agricultural Credit Guarantee Scheme. 137 Annex 4: Selected Parastatal Finances 2008/9 2009/10 P million Profit/Loss Net transfers Govt Equity Cost of capital Profit/Loss Net transfers Govt Equity Cost of capital [1] [1] Utilities BPC -133.6 -2.7 6,466.5 776.7 -549.5 [2] -2.2 5,269.9 653.8 BTC 144.8 14.6 1,278.3 155.0 181.1 29.7 1,127.0 136.1 WUC 139.7 39.6 2,145.7 260.5 171.6 -16.2 2,416.5 291.7 Transport AB -87.0 -159.1 50.3 6.0 -45.1 -267.5 235.0 28.2 BR 50.8 1,103.4 132.4 -30.9 1,103.4 132.4 Finance BDC 343.3 104.7 1,756.2 210.7 203.6 46.4 2,111.4 253.4 CEDA 32.2 -160.0 833.8 100.1 NDB 50.8 0.0 586.0 73.9 57.8 0.0 626.8 78.1 Agriculture Support BAMB 14.7 -31.6 62.8 7.8 -1.0 -10.6 107.7 13.2 BMC 81.9 28.4 328.3 40.1 -89.1 3.4 238.3 30.7 [1] Capital & reserves [2] excludes exceptional losses from currency hedge of approx P1 billion 138 Annex 5: IFSC Companies YEAR COMPANY NAME BUSINESS SECTOR UNDERLYING BUSINESS CERTIFIED Seed Co International Group Holding Company Agr. Research & Seed Development 2000 African Alliance International Group Shared Services Fund Administration Services 2000 Cyberplex Holdings Group Holding Company Software Development 2001 ABC Holdings Group Holding Company Banking 2002 Kingdom Bank Africa Group Holding Company Banking 2003 AON Risk Management Financial Advisory Risk Services 2003 Imara Holdings Botswana Group Holding Company Asset management 2003 Wilderness Holdings Group Holding Company Tourism & Leisure operations 2003 Cherubin Ventures Investment Funds Manager Fund Management 2003 CB Richard Ellis Regional Financial Advisory Property valuation & Advisory Services 2004 Bergstan Financial Services Company Group Shared Services Acctng & Admin serv. - engineering group 2004 Finluca International Financial Advisory Investment Advisory Services 2004 Letshego Holdings Group Holding Company Consumer lending services 2005 PAM International Group Holding Company Property valuation & Advisory Services 2005 Island View Group Holding Company Property Investment holding 2005 Windward Capital Group Treasury & Confirming House Goods Sales & Distribution 2006 Pangaea Development Holdings Group Shared Services Property Development 2006 WESTCOR Group Holding Company Infrastructure development 2007 Aerospace Africa Holdings Group Holding Company Aviation Leasing 2007 Leisure Investment Holdings Group Holding Company Casino/Gambling operations 2007 Genesis Global Finance Group Holding Company Investment Advisory, micro financing 2007 Runway Asset Management Group Holding Company Aviation Leasing 2007 EFFCO Investment Holding Company Asset backed finance and leasing 2007 Business Software Services Group Holding Company Software Development 2008 Walfin Business Process Outsourcing Card Processing Operations 2008 139 Emeritus Reinsurance International International Insurance Re Insurance 2008 Summit Development Group Group Holding Company Property Investment holding 2008 Bourse Africa Capital Markets Commodities & derivatives exchange 2008 Vantage Capital Investment Fund Manager Fund Management 2008 PTA Solutions Business Process Outsourcing Call Center 2008 ARIYA Capital Financial Advisory Investment Advisory Services 2009 ABN AMRO Banking Specialised Regional Diamond Financing 2009 Central Transmission Corridor Group Holding Company Regional Power Infrastructure 2009 SAMSTAR Capital Management Investment Fund Manager Fund Management 2009 SME Financial Holdings Investment Holding Company Diversified Investment Holdings 2010 Sasco Africa Holdings Group Accounting & Treasury Company Industrial Weighing Services 2010 SDG Africa Investment Fund SME focused development fund 2010 Untu Holdings International Business Company Micro Finance 2010 Vital Investments Business Process Outsourcing Call Center Operations 2010 SAMDEF Capital Management Investment Fund Manager Fund Management 2011 Southern Africa Media & Technology Fund Investment Fund Investments in regional media houses 2011 140 Annex 6: Summary of General and Sector-specific Incentives Agriculture & Agro-industry Mining Manufacturing Services Not sector specific (including energy & downstream minerals processing) Tax measures • VAT exemptions on • Sector-specific variable • Concessional • Innovation Hub tax • Normal corporate selected agricultural inputs profits tax rate 15% profits tax concession (15%) tax rate 22% (wef (standard rate rate • IFSC companies 1.7.2011) minimum) (offshore financial • Standard VAT rate • Accelerated and business of 12% with few depreciation (capital services) tax exemptions allowances) concession (15%) Other levies • Royalty on gross value • Alcohol levy • Telecomms levy of • Training levy 0.2% of mineral production 40% of import / 3% of turnover (to of turnover for ex-factory price fund regulator) VAT-registered • Electricity levy firms P0.05/kWh (approx 9%) to fund rural connections Public goods (e.g. • NAMPAAD • Diamond Hub (includes • BEDIA focus on • IFSC • LEA – business and investment • LEA – focused support on cutting & polishing) manufacturing • Botswana Tourism technical support to promotion) selected agricultural (for inward Organisation SMMEs activities and agro- investment, • Transport Hub processing export support, • Innovation Hub • Agriculture Hub premises) • Education Hub 141 Agriculture & Agro-industry Mining Manufacturing Services Not sector specific (including energy & downstream minerals processing) • Veterinary services • Medical Hub Infrastructure • Investment in infrastructure • BEDIA related to cattle/beef SPS provision of measures factory shells Trade measures • Seasonal border closures for • Small-scale mining • Restrictions on and market entry selected agricultural reserved for citizens certain services products imports (esp. • Ban on beef and poultry professional services, imports telecoms) • BMC beef export monopoly • Air Botswana • Infant industry protection monopoly (40% intra-SACU tariff) for • Reservation policy UHT milk (closed to foreign ownership): some non-tradeable services (see Appx 5); some tourism activities; road passenger transport Finance • CEDA Young Farmers Fund • CEDA loan • NDB subsidies • ACGS • BDC 142 Agriculture & Agro-industry Mining Manufacturing Services Not sector specific (including energy & downstream minerals processing) • NDB • Government direct loans and guarantees to parastatals Procurement • BAMB • Local Preference (EDD) Price regulation • Electricity & • Telecomms services • Fuel water • Bank charges Subsidies • ISPAAD – free or heavily • Employment subsidised draught power, subsidy in tractors, fertiliser, seeds, textiles/ logistical support garments 143 Annex 7: Reserved Activities 1. Reserved under the Trade Act 2008 2011 Auctioneer Agent Car wash Auctioneer Cleaning services Car wash Curio shop Cleaning services Fresh produce sales Curio shop Funeral parlour Dry-cleaning depot General clothing sales Florist General dealer Fresh produce sales Hairdressing Funeral parlour Hire services General clothing sales Laundromat General dealer Petrol filling station Hairdressing & beauty parlours Takeaway (food) Hire services Internet café and copy shop Laundromat Petrol filling station Takeaway (food) Source: Trade Act, 2008; Trade Regulations, 2011 Items in bold – newly added in 2011 2. Other Small-scale mining Road passenger transport Selected tourism operations Annex 8: Major Policy Strategies and Programs Botswana Excellence Strategy (2008). The “Strategy for Economic Diversification and Sustainable Growth� is aimed at addressing the primary challenge of Botswana, which is to diversify the economy to ensure that Batswana continue to enjoy the fruits of sustained economic growth post depletion of minerals, especially diamonds. The strategy is predicated on international competitiveness, openness, and integration with the global economy. The strategy aims to benefit all sectors but includes some sector- specific activities and projects, including: • Agriculture: commercialising, restructuring and rebuilding the livestock sector; high value crops; and agro-industry projects; • Tourism: diversification away from current reliance on high-cost low-volume activities in northern Botswana; • Transport hub: positioning Botswana as an air, road and rail traffic, as well as logistics support hub for Southern and Central Africa; • Free zones: providing incentives (tax, labour, land, telecommunications costs), for highly specific investment ventures, likely to include information technology, communications bio-technology and specialist medical, diamond polishing and jewellery; • Innovation hub: infrastructure, space and incentives for companies in the IT, communication and bio- technology fields • Diamond beneficiation: cutting, polishing, trading, finance etc. • Banking & financial services (IFSC) • Mining diversification, with a particular focus on activities based on coal and gas reserves The BES envisages a combination of deregulation and policy reform (e.g. open skies to promote transport and tourism); improved public finance management and budgeting; tax and other incentives (unspecified), and government-led investment projects, particularly in infrastructure. The Botswana Excellence Strategy has been officially adopted by Cabinet, and is meant to be spearheaded by the National Strategy Office (NSO, formerly Government Implementation and Co-ordination Office (GICO)). However, implementation appears to have lagged, and some policies implemented by other agencies appear to conflict with the BES. Botswana Trade Policy. Botswana trade policy refers to the framework of laws, regulations, international agreements and negotiating positions as well as Government’s guidelines and pronouncements on trade which define how the country will conduct its trade with bilateral, regional and multilateral trading partners. This policy plays a key role in the flow of goods and services between Botswana and her trading partners. Even though the policy is founded on the principles of free trade and competition, the Government notes that countries rarely put in place policies that permit perfectly free international trade. Instead, each country maintains a mixture of both restrictive and free trade policies. • The Government uses tariffs ostensibly for infant industry protection purposes. Botswana maintains export levies and taxes on certain commodities to achieve the country’s objectives of food security and domestic industry access to essential raw materials. • The Government is committed to supporting and strengthening export development and promotion – as reviewed later in this chapter -- through (i) innovative ways of using economic incentives through the development of a two-tier incentive system: one set of incentives applicable to export firms located inside the special economic zones (SEZs) and a general set of incentives applicable to firms located outside the SEZs and the “hubs� operating outside the SEZs. (ii) promotion of Botswana’s globally competitive exports through BEDIA’s effective implementation of Botswana’s Investment Strategy 145 and (iii) simplification of trade rules and procedures as well as removal of all factors that impede trade facilitation in Botswana. • Botswana has no entity dedicated to providing financing for export activities. There are, however, institutions that provide general business financing, namely, the Citizen Entrepreneurial Development Agency (CEDA), the National Development Bank (NDB) and Botswana Development Corporation (BDC). Botswana Export Credit and Insurance (BECI) provides credit insurance that covers both commercial and political risks. The policy, approved by Parliament in 2010, includes strategic trade policy considerations, which form its core elements. These include tariff-based measures, taxes and duty drawbacks as well as non-tariff measures, which are used as tools for industrial development; trade defence measures which are used to advance the country’s offensive and defensive interests; measures affecting production and trade which are instruments for stimulating export development; trade negotiations which define the country’s negotiation strategies to derive maximum benefits from trade agreements while simultaneously protecting its interests; as well as a host of cross cutting issues which are expected to impact on Botswana’s trade policy. Capital allowances are provided at specified rates depending on the type of asset. Table 1: Capital Allowances Asset Initial Annual Allowance Allowance Industrial Buildings 25% 2.5 % Commercial Buildings 0% 2.5 % Furniture, Fixtures, Office Machinery and Fittings 0% 10% Plant and Machinery (general) 0% 15% Other self propelled plant or machinery used directly 0% 25% in manufacture or production Plant and machinery (Heavy engineering plant) 0% 25% Aircraft and Motor vehicles 0% 25% Computer Hardware 0% 25% Source: BURS The rates of capital allowances appear to be fairly closely related to the economic lifespan of the assets (the main exceptions being aircraft and motor vehicles, where the economic lifespan is considerably longer than the tax allowance period, and the initial 25% allowance Industrial Development Policy. The revised IDP aims to provide a framework for industrial development and diversification, leading to sustained employment creation, as diamond output declines. It is focused on building an economic base of regionally and internationally competitive firms – i.e. diversification is based on an outward looking export-focused approach rather than an inward-looking, import substitution approach. The IDP encourages levelling the playing field in incentives to service sector and manufacturing, in contrast to the current situation where manufacturing has been enjoying more incentives than service industry. It proposes a number of interventions, including reducing the cost and improving the efficiency of production through improving the business environment and the investment climate, and through investment in appropriate public goods, notably efficiency-enhancing infrastructure. 146 A draft Industrial Development Policy document was prepared in 2010 and is being reviewed by the Ministry of Trade and Industry. Botswana Trade Policy. Botswana trade policy refers to the framework of laws, regulations, international agreements and negotiating positions as well as Government’s guidelines and pronouncements on trade which define how the country will conduct its trade with bilateral, regional and multilateral trading partners. The policy, approved by Parliament in 2010, includes strategic trade policy considerations, which form its core elements. These include tariff-based measures, taxes and duty drawbacks as well as non-tariff measures, which are used as tools for industrial development; trade defence measures which are used to advance the country’s offensive and defensive interests; measures affecting production and trade which are instruments for stimulating export development; trade negotiations which define the country’s negotiation strategies to derive maximum benefits from trade agreements while simultaneously protecting its interests; as well as a host of cross cutting issues which are expected to impact on Botswana’s trade policy. National Export Strategy (2010). The major aim of the National Export Strategy (NES) is to make Botswana globally competitive with a view to expanding current levels of exports and placing new ones in the international markets as well as diversifying the country’s export base and creating employment. To achieve this, the NES aims to develop competitiveness strategies that will strengthen Botswana’s place in the global economic arena. The National Export Strategy is designed in a way that makes it applicable to any export sector based on the broad strategic priorities identified. However, as a starting point, the strategy identified seven key manufacturing sectors. These sectors, which are of primary but not exclusive focus, are for initial implementation by the NES: arts and crafts; garments and textiles; jewellery; diamonds and other mineral beneficiation; glass and glass products; leather and leather products; and meat and meat products. These sectors were identified by BEDIA on the basis of export potential, job creation potential, and various other factors. Although the emphasis is on manufacturing, a similar process has identified priority service sectors, including: tourism; financial services; ICT; business process outsourcing (BPO); transport; medical services; and mining engineering services. The NES consists of a mixture of general objectives (e.g. “to move Botswana from natural resource-based competitiveness to competitiveness based on efficiency enhancers and innovation and sophistication factors�) and very specific objectives (e.g. “negotiate for 24 hour opening of all strategic commercial border posts�). It also proposes a sophisticated institutional framework for overseeing the implementation of the NES and related components of other policies and strategies. The NES was also approved by Cabinet in 2010. Botswana Investment Strategy. The proclaimed objective of this strategy is to attract high levels of domestic and foreign investment inflows into Botswana through the creation of an investor-friendly business environment. The strategy is premised on creating incentives for the private sector to produce globally competitive goods and services that will create a significant market share for Botswana in world markets; and the removal of all obstacles and impediments to business development in the country. The BIS proposes reviewing of the investment incentive package, provision of better access to finance credit and reduction of multiple tax systems. As with the NES, the Investment Strategy for Botswana was approved by Cabinet in 2010. Private Sector Development Strategy. The strategy is designed to provide a systematic and coherent framework to promote the development and growth of the private sector. It identifies the gains achieved thus far and the constraints; and provides proposals to spur entrepreneurial development; attract foreign 147 and domestic investment and create business opportunities. It focuses on 4 cross priority areas: Trade Expansion, Labour Productivity, Trade Support Institutions, Business Climate. The PSDS is primarily a strategy to be implemented by the private sector, with some government support. Economic Diversification Drive (EDD). The EDD strategy is at the centrepiece of the Government’s economic diversification efforts, and in many ways seems to supersede earlier initiatives such as the “Botswana Excellence� strategy. The EDD is formulated in two phases: Phase I – the EDD Short-term Strategy, and Phase II – the EDD Medium-to-Long Term Strategy, 2011-2016. The EDD Short-term strategy is focused on local procurement, preference margins and citizen economic empowerment. It is intended to ensure that procuring entities support local manufacturers and service providers by promotion of local procurement through preference margins. The programme is applicable to procurement by central and local government, and by parastatals. Phase II of the EDD comprises the Medium to Long- Term Strategy, which “envisages diversification of the economy through the development of globally competitive enterprises that need little or no Government protection and support�. The program comprises seven thematic areas: (i) Sectoral Development and Business Linkages (ii) Export Development and Promotion (iii) Investment and Finance (iv) Quality Control, Standards and Production (v) Technology Development, Innovation and Transfer (vi) Research and Development (vii) Entrepreneurship Development The EDD Phase II will be promoted by a new body, the National Economic Diversification Council, and supported by seven thematic teams. To date, Phase I is in operation, while Phase II is being finalized after approval by the cabinet. Reservation Policy. Entry to certain activities is regulated and restricted to citizens only (so foreign ownership is not permitted). The scope of reserved activities, while fairly narrow, has gradually been expanding. [What are the covered activities and recent new additions?] “Hub� Projects. Six specialized structures - termed hubs - have been established in agriculture, diamonds, education, health, innovation and transport to drive diversification and growth. These areas have been selected on the basis of several considerations including increasing efficient utilisation of existing areas of strength, resources and capacity, exploiting regional opportunities and emphasising the development of a number of niche opportunities. The Hubs comprise a mixture of ongoing and planned physical projects, investment promotion initiatives and regulatory/policy reforms. To date, hub co- ordinators have been appointed, attached to the relevant ministries, with small support staffs. Agricultural programmes. There are several agricultural programs funded by the government. The programs aim to make agriculture competitive and reduce the country’s reliance on imports of agricultural produce that can be viably produced locally. The programs offer financial assistance and technical assistance. The programs include: National Master Plan for Arable Agricultural and Dairy Development (NAMPAADD), Integrated Support Programme for Arable Agriculture Development (ISPAAD), Livestock Management and Infrastructure Development (LIMID). • NAMPAAD: the primary objective of is to promote the commercialisation of agriculture, to make it competitive and reduce the country’s reliance on imports of agricultural produce that can be cost- effectively produced locally. This programme focuses on dairy, horticulture and rain-fed farming. NAMPAADD has no financial assistance component. Instead it assists farmers with the preparation of 148 business plans for loan applications to financial institutions. It also operates demonstration farms. • ISPAAD: provides support for rainfed crop production, particularly small-scale farmers. Approximately P200 million is spent annually on ISPAAD. • LIMID: one of the main agricultural support schemes and is composed of animal husbandry and fodder support, water development, co-operative poultry abattoirs for small-scale poultry producers. Assistance is extended only to resource-poor farmers. • Veterinary services: are provided for the agricultural sector, primarily the cattle industry (beef and to a smaller extent, dairy). Much of this is support for disease control (e.g. FMD), and for meeting SPS and related requirements for access to the EU market. The activity breakdown of these companies is shown below. • Table 2: Manufacturing DAOs by sub-sector Sub-sector Number Diamond cutting etc 7 Vehicles & parts 8 Paints, chemicals 9 Plastics, fiberglass 17 Furniture 20 Brick & concrete products 20 Metal products 20 Food processing 26 Other & unknown 27 Textiles 31 Source: MFDP Marginal Effective Tax Rates (METRs) The METR measures taxes paid by a marginal investment as a share of the required before-tax rate of return on that investment. The METR depends on: • headline profits tax rate • capital allowances • any other taxes (e.g. mineral royalties) • allowable depreciation rates for tax calculations If there is no investment (capital) allowance and tax depreciation exactly reflects the economic depreciation of physical assets, then for an equity-financed investment the METR will equal the statutory tax rate. The METR calculations here reflect: • the three different profits tax rates in Botswana: standard - 22%; concessional (manufacturing, IFSC, BIH) -15%; and mining - variable, 22% - 55%. • initial capital allowances: industrial buildings -25% (but subject to 5-yr limit on loss carry-forward); and mining - 100% (no limit on loss carry-forward). • depreciation allowances - generally aligned to economic depreciation (no wedge); • withholding taxes (WHT) on dividends: standard rate 7.5%; IFSC 0% • other taxes - mineral royalties: 3% - 10% 149 Table 3: Illustrative Examples of METRs108 Sector METR IFSC 15% Concessional (manufacturing, BIH) 21% 28% Standard (e.g. services, construction) Mining – diamonds (35% formula rate) 40% Mining – diamonds (standard rate) 28% Mining – gold (standard rate) 23% Mining – coal/copper (standard rate) 22% Source: own calculations These results illustrate that effective tax rates are close to statutory rates. The 100% capital allowance in mining is beneficial and largely offsets (or more than offsets) impact of royalties. The table below shows the breakdown of government revenues in FY 2010/11 (revised estimates, Feb 2011) Table 4: Sources of Tax Revenue, 2010/11 P mn % of total Total 29,768 Mineral Tax 2,728 9.2% Customs Pool 6,004 20.2% Non-Mineral Income Tax 5,806 19.5% Sales Tax/VAT 4,668 15.7% Mineral Royalties and Dividends 6,589 22.1% Other* 3,973 13.3% Memorandum items Minerals total 9,317 31.3% o/w Banks’ corporate tax 470 1.6% Manufacturing (concessionary) 80 0.3% IFSC 14 0.05% Sources: MFDP, BoB, BURS, IFSC Notes: (i) “other� includes fees, charges, vehicle taxes, BoB dividends, interest, sale of property etc. (ii) non-mineral income tax includes both personal and corporate tax; the split between the two is approximately 35% personal 65% corporate (iii) the share of mineral revenues in total revenues was relatively low in 2010/11 by historical standards, due to impact of global financial crisis (iv) the banks are largest contributors to non-mineral corporate tax, and contribute approximately 16% of total. 108 These illustrative METRs are derived for examples with a pre-tax IRR (on a cash-flow basis) of 30%. They are 100% equity financed and pay out 100% of post-tax profits as dividends. 150 Table 5: IFSC Details FY2008/9 FY2009/10 FY2010/11 # of accredited companies 35 42 Taxes paid by IFSC companies P87m P59m P13m GoB Subventions: - operations P7.4m P9.4m P9.3m - legal review P1.0m P2.0m Aggregate capital IFSC companies P6 billion P8 billion P4 billion* Source: IFSC Annual Reports Note: derived from survey of IFSC companies. *definition changed These figures result in average tax rates – calculated as % of value added – as follows, for 2010-11: Table 6: Effective Tax Rates VA Tax Effective rate Non-mining* 42,358 5,806 13.7% Mining 31,561 2,728 (a) 8.6% Mining 9,317 (b) 29.5% *Excludes non-taxpaying sectors (agriculture, water & electricity and government); includes taxes on employees. Notes: (a) mining income tax only; (b) includes royalties & dividends Financial Assistance Policy. The FAP was a subsidy scheme focused on manufacturing and non-cattle agricultural activities that operated from 1982 until 2001. There were various components to the scheme, but the main element was an employment-related grant available to new or expanding medium- and large- scale firms over a five-year period, and to small-scale firms as a one off payment. The scheme was wound up after its 4th Evaluation (BIDPA, 2000), which found that it had little success in creating sustainable firms and employment, and was subject to increasing abuse, especially for small-scale FAP grants. As a result, the cost per job created had risen excessively. Although the FAP scheme has not operated for some years, it is important as it provided the foundation of investment incentives for nearly two decades. When FAP was wound up, it was replaced by subsidized lending from CEDA. 151