Title: TRADE, ECONOMIC GROWTH AND ICT IN KENYA
1 TRADE, ECONOMIC GROWTH AND ICT IN KENYA
- A STUDY FOR THE ECONOMIC COMMISSION FOR AFRICA
- Dr. Mbui Wagacha
- mwagacha_at_wananchi.com
- Prof. Meoli Kashorda
- mkashorda_at_strathmore.edu
2Themes for ICT in Kenya
- Objective of Government
- Buy a cow instead of milking a calf
- Objective of some ICT Players
- Why buy a cow when milking a calf will give you
all the milk you want?
3OBJECTIVES OF STUDY
- ASESS ICT TRADE POLICY
- DEMONSTRATE POTENTIAL ECONOMIC BENEFITS OF ICT IN
TRADE - ASSESS ICT AWARENESS IN SMMEs
- DEVELOP PROPOSE RELEVANT RECOMMENDATIONS TO
GOVT
4METHODOLOGY
- EMPIRICAL WORK EVIDENCE
- PRODUCTIVITY ANALYSIS
- SURVEY (DATA FROM RESEARCH ICT-AFRICA)
- W.B. INVESTMENT CLIMATE SURVEY 2003
- ITU TELCOMS DATABASE
5THIS PRESENTATION
- Learning from Global Experience ICT-Growth-Trade
- ICT in Kenyas Growth Trade Strategy
- Building an ICT/Growth/Trade Agenda
- Institutional Developments in ICT sector
- Fiscal Impact Issues
- ICT Investment-Growth-Macro Impact
- SME Survey- Manufacturing Services
- Production Framework of ICT
- Assemblers, Service Repair Telecommunications
61. Global ICT-Growth-Trade Country Strategies
- Strengthen Growth Competitiveness
- Strengthen ICT-macroeconomic-trade link
7ICT-Growth-Trade (contd)DIVERSITY OF EXPERIENCES
- Benefits of ICT cut across Developed and
Developing Countries - Developing Country benefits are HIGHER
- Example of mobile phone For an increase of 10
units per 100 people - GDP growth up 0.6 percent per year in Developing
countries (twice as high as in Developed
Countries (Prof. Fuss, London Business School) - (Over 70 billion Ksh for Kenya)
8ICT-Growth-Trade (contd)
- Example of Internet Use
- Increases Total Exports by 4.3 percent
- Developing countries with initial poor access to
Internet gain most - Yet, WTOs Basic Telecom Agreement not
universally accepted for liberalising ICT trade
despite commitments by 70 countries. Why? Few
benefits for non-producing countries of ICT
hardware/software.
9ICT-Growth-Trade (contd)
- Evidence on performance of SMEs is mixed
- Total factor productivity (TFP) UP
- 1 1 gt 2
- Mobile vs. transport costs vs time savings vs
infromation search etc - NO significant impact on enterprise return
- NEGATIVE impact on Labor productivity
- Hence need for training (learning curve for
employees) - POSITIVE impact on market expansion
- NO significant impact on export performance
- New markets for SMEs not necessarily penetrated
using ICT - Business relationships and trust factors persist
- Questions of ICT over-investt relative to labor
skills, etc
10ICT-Growth-Trade (contd)
- Commercial Practices ICT in Trade Business to
Business (B2B) model - ICT entrenches traditional buyer/producer
directions of trade makes it difficult for new
entrants empirical evidence for garments and
horticulture Kenya, Bangladesh, S. Africa - Relevant to trade
- Consumer to Business (C2B) model
- Not very relevant to trade
11ICT-Growth-Trade (contd)GLOBAL LESSONS FOR KENYA
- HOW TO GO FOR GLOBAL TRADE GAINS
- Remove market failures in ICT-
- Enhance affordability and ICT competition in
trade sector - Focus an ICT-trained workforce
- Certify and publish on-line businesses that
export markets can do business with in the
different sectors agriculture, industry,
services - Promote a credible payments mechanism
- Address cyber security and cyber crime
- Promote E-Government as driver ICT innovation
growth (OECD study). This means digitizing
results of GOK and its activities Education
Health Transport Finance Central Banking
Immigration etc - KCPE results by SMS or Internet
- KRA ETR
- E-procurement
12ICT-Growth-Trade (contd)
- OTHER LESSONS
- Equitable Access (ICT is reaching barely 20
percent of population in Kenya) - Affordability and lower costs of ICT as plank for
reaching the remaining 80 percent - Deepen Trust Factors- To create new export
markets, deepen existing ones. This means
deepen PAYMT CODES STANDARDS COMMERCIAL
DISPUTE RESOLUTION REGULATORY FRAMEWORKS, etc
132. ICT in Kenyas Growth Trade Strategy
- In ERSWEC (2003-2007, incl. Investment Programme)
Trade is treated under the Productive Sectors - Kenya runs surplus in EAC COMESA (40 of latter
mainly industrial goods services) Runs
structural deficits on imports mainly from OECD
(imported inputs vs exports of garments agric
incl. horticulture) - HOWEVER, ICT Policy 2006 sets strategic, targets
in tele-density bandwidth mobile subscribers
ISPs etc LINK OF ICT TO THE DEMANDS OF SECTORS
NOT YET MADE SUPPLY FACTORS ALONE WILL NOT WORK
14ICT in Kenyas Growth/Trade Strategy (contd)
- ADDRESSING THE DEMAND SIDE IS A STRATEGIC ICT GAP
- FINDINGS OF PREVIOUS ECA PAPER ON KENYAS TRADE
PARADOX - TRADE LIBERALISATION PURSUES EXPORT PROMOTION AT
EXPENSE OF DOMESTIC RESOURCE MOBILN INVESTMT,
- OVERALL GAINS IN TRADE THEORY COME FROM
CONSUMPN, INVESTMENT CHANGE IN THE MEANS OF
PRODUCTION IN THE PRIORITY SECTORS - AGRICULTURE Main exports to OECD coffee, tea,
horticulture 60 forex earnings ICTpurpose
Modernize Increase productivity - INDUSTRY Main exports to Africa ICTpurpose add
ICT to sector, with fiscal incentives, Modernize
Increase productivity hold African markets. - SERVICES ICTpurpose Modernize Increase
productivity of financial services, tourism,
communications, transport etc - IN ICT, LOOK AT SUPPLY SIDE IN CONTEXT OF DEMAND
SIDE
15WHY ICT MUST BE DEMAND DRIVEN, SECTOR SPECIFIC
- Prodn, Consumption, Trade
- KENYA EXPORTS TO WORLD
- AFRICA Industrial goods
- Services
- OECD coffee, tea,
- Horticulture, garments
- Scenario A STRATEGIC ICT
- ICT INCREASES PRODUCTIVITY
- ICT INCREASES COMPARATIVE
- ADVANTAGE
- ICT INSIDE VALUE CHAIN WILL
- SUPPORT PRODN
- FOR AFRICA OECD MARKETS
- Scenario B UN-STRATEGIC ICT
- Lose competitiveness in
- Africa markets
- Become High-cost producer
- in OECD markets
- WORLD EXPORTS TO KENYA
- Capital goods machinery, cars,
- ships, etc
- Inputs Fertilizer, seeds, chemicals
- Specialized services
- ICT INCREASES PRODUCTIVITY
- ICT INCREASES COMPARATIVE
- ADVANTAGE
- ICT INCREASES PENETRATION
- ESPECIALLY IN
- KENYAS AFRICA EXPORT
- MARKET- MAINLY INDUSTRIAL
- GOODS
163. Building an ICT/Growth/Trade Agenda
- Institutional Developments
- Fiscal Impact
- ICT Investment-Growth-Macro Impact
- SME Survey- Manufng Services
17a. Institutional Developments
- Kenya Communications Act (KCA) 1998
- Set up
- Policy Body National Communications Secretariat
Appeals Tribunal - Regulation and Operations
- Communications Commission of Kenya Go from
De-regulation Licensing to Regulation, e.g
dominant operator, expansion, competition - Posta
- Telcom ( monopoly gateway with Jambonet)
18b. Fiscal Impact
- ICT taxes are new increased taxation complex
issues, eg mobile used to generate income in
Mandera but excise tax collected in Nairobi - Due to monopolies and duopoly, Tax incidence is
passed on to consumers - Excisable Airtime (up by 35 2005-2006 alone)
holds up GDP growth and is on consumers. Tax as
luxury good (like whisky, beer and cigarettes,
inappropriate) - Operators monopoly pricing works against
consumers - Interconnectivity charges (Safaricom-Celtel) are
a further margin against consumers, CCK should
have acted - OVERALL, THE FISCAL POSITION IN KENYA LOWERS
AFFORDABILITY,SHIFTS TAXATION TO CONSUMERS AND
OBSTRUCTS ICT DEVELOPMENT.
19c. Making the ICT Investment-Growth-Macro Link
- Need to collect data on ICT investment by sector
same way as CPI - Begin Measures of ICT vs non-ICT productivity of
investment - Involves disaggregating of traditional Production
Function or use of Vector Autoregression Methods
20d. SME Survey- Manufng Services
- Manufacturing SMEs -61 firms
- Services SMEs-216 firms
- Results
- Number of firms with no ICT access is high
- ICT infrastructure and intensity of use differs
among the economic sectors depending on nature of
business and need for product specialization - Post-box, Mobiles and fixed lines are the lead
items in both sectors - Of the ICT indicators, e-mail and Web use lead
within the manufacturing and service sectors
relative to computer usage. However, Web use is
higher in the service sector than in
manufacturing and a much higher rate of employees
use computers in the service sector (40 percent
or more) than do so in manufacturing.
214. Production Framework of ICT
- Assemblers Service Repair Telecommunications
- Mushrooming of Computer and telcoms equipt
assemblers esp. in Nairobi 30 percent of
computer requirements locally assembled - Tariff structure (duty free computers vs duty on
parts) inhibits investment and expansion - Mixed policy signals- 2.5 duty on products from
EPZ
22Production Framework (contd)
- Telecommunications
- Telcom Kenya- exclusivity on fixed line
telephony long-distance and international
gateway Internet backbone - Mobile cellular services still uncompetitive-
Duopoly with high profits relative to other
sectors.
23MAIN RECOMMENDATIONS
- Support demand-driven sector specific content of
ICT to drive investment-growth-trade - Address market failures in ICT for Trade
facilitation payments, commercial dispute
resolution, cyber security and cyber crime, codes
of conduct GOK on-line list of businesses
certified to do business with on trust-factor
basis - Digitize Government
- Develop and Monitor sector-specific ICT
indicators, e-readiness, the same way as we track
inflation using in CPI of goods and services
24THANK YOU
- THANK YOU ALL
- Mbui Wagacha