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1 Parliament Portfolio Committee on Trade and Industry Briefing on dti Incentives and IDZs Presented by: Tumelo Chipfupa Deputy Director General The Enterprise.

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Presentation on theme: "1 Parliament Portfolio Committee on Trade and Industry Briefing on dti Incentives and IDZs Presented by: Tumelo Chipfupa Deputy Director General The Enterprise."— Presentation transcript:

1 1 Parliament Portfolio Committee on Trade and Industry Briefing on dti Incentives and IDZs Presented by: Tumelo Chipfupa Deputy Director General The Enterprise Organisation 06 June 2007

2 2 CONTENTS Overview of dti Current situation with incentives Impact of incentives Recommendations from the Incentives Review Process Action plan on new incentive programmes Industrial Development Zones Budget allocations (MTEF)

3 3 Purpose of Presentation To brief the Portfolio Committee on Trade and Industry regarding: –the dti incentives –Industrial Development Zones (IDZs)

4 4 Incentives administration within the dti The dti strategic objectives –Promoting coordinated implementation of the accelerated and shared growth initiative –Promoting direct investment and growth in the industrial and services sectors –Contributing towards the development and regional integration of the African Continent within the Nepad framework –Promoting broader participation, equity and redress –Raising the level of export and promoting global trade TEO is a division within the dti responsible for the development and administration of incentives Some incentives are managed in other divisions, for e.g. –SPII and THRIP are administered through IDC and NRF respectively –MIDP and DCCS are administered through ITAC –NIP is administered through EIDD.

5 5 The dti House Ministry Office of the DG Policy co- ordination International Trade and Economic Development Enterprise and Industry Development Consumer and Corporate Regulation The Enterprise Organisation Trade and Investment South Africa Marketing Group Systems and Support Services

6 6 Current Situation Current incentive programmes were introduced in 2000, most planned for six (6) years Incentives constitute #% (Rm) of dti annual budget Cabinet approved the National Industrial Policy Framework (NIPF) recently Incentives review completed to determine appropriate types of incentive programmes to support the NIPF, the targets and funds required for incentives going forward The review considered targets set in ASGI-SA and the Customised Sector Programmes (CSPs) As a result, some incentives are being phased-out; and new ones are being introduced.

7 7 Incentive Programmes (2000 – 2006) Investment Grants & Tax Incentives Small and Medium Enterprise Development Programme (SMEDP) Strategic Industrial Projects Foreign Investment Grant Critical Infrastructure Programme Capital Goods Feasibility Study Fund Business Process Outsourcing and Offshoring Film and TV Production Rebate Scheme Cooperative Incentive Scheme __ ACTIVE __ Competitiveness  Sector Partnership Fund  Competitiveness Fund  Skills Support Programme  Black Business Supplier Development Programme Trade Facilitation Export Marketing and Investment Assistance (EMIA) PHASED-OUT __ DISCONTINUED

8 8 Impact of dti Incentive Programmes

9 9 Investment Incentives 1.SMEDP 2.SIP 3.CIP 4.DEPP 5.BPO

10 10 SMEDP offered a maximum grant of 10% pa on a sliding scale for investment of up to R100 million SMEDP’s objective is to promote investments by SMEs Since 2000, approved 12,359 SMEs for an incentive grant of R13.9 billion to start new or expand existing enterprises Small Medium Enterprise Development Programme (SMEDP)

11 11 Small Medium Enterprise Development Programme …cont’d

12 12 SMEDP is the largest incentive programme in the dti considering the number of applications and an annual budget of R650 million Supported investment by SMEs of R67 billion in plant, machinery and equipment 330,600 jobs are projected. Small Medium Enterprise Development Programme …cont’d

13 13 Small Medium Enterprise Development Programme …cont’d SMEDP is being reviewed The new programme will continue to support investment by SMEs Particular emphasis is to be placed on projects creating higher employment opportunities and those in the priority sectors Consultations currently underway with key stakeholders to finalise new programme guidelines

14 14 Strategic Industrial Projects SIP is a tax allowance to attract investment of more than R50m to SA Application window lapsed in July 2005 Projects required to establish within 4 years from SIP approval date 45 projects approved with qualifying investments value of R28.7 billion SIP assisted in raising private sector investments in large projects that have spin-offs for other economic activities, SMMEs employment and cluster groups.

15 15 25 projects have established to date –Investment worth R7,8 billion –12,018 jobs Strategic Industrial Projects …cont’d

16 16 Critical Infrastructure Programme (CIP) CIP provides grants to support infrastructure necessary for the establishment of investment projects Since 2001, 21 projects were approved for the grant amount of R1,5 billion –18 private sector companies for the grant amount of R990 million –3 IDZs for the grant amount of R510 million 10 projects have established investing up to R9,2 billion The infrastructure supports investment of up to R17,5 billion

17 17 Developmental Electricity Pricing Programme (DEPP) Launched in August 2006 Provides special concessions on electricity input costs for energy intensive investment projects (minimum of 50 megawatts) To date, Alcan in Coega IDZ is the only project approved Conditions for approval requires the Alcan to supply aluminum to downstream industries at competitive prices without practicing Import Parity Prices.

18 18 Business Process Outsourcing and Off-shoring Features of the BPO&O An investment incentive scheme to attract BPO&O investment that creates employment opportunities A training and skills support grants for company-specific training Targeted at both local and foreign investors establishing projects aimed at serving off-shore clients

19 19 Qualifying expenditure Qualifying training and skills development expenditure is for: In-house and/outsourced company-specific training (on products / language / systems) In-house trainer development / facilitators /assessor training Cost of developing learning materials / programmes Cost of trainer secondment into SA (airfares & subsistence) Cost of purchasing and installing training equipment and facilities

20 20 COMPETITIVENESS PROMOTION INCENTIVES 1. BBSDP 2. THRIP 3. SPII 4. SEDA TECHNOLOGY INCUBATORS 5. EMIA 6. LARGE BUDGET FILM REBATE

21 21 Black Business Supplier Development Programme (BBSDP) BBSDP is a 80:20% cost-sharing grant, which offers support to black-owned enterprises in South Africa BBSDP assists black-owned small enterprises to improve their capability for supplying corporate and public sector contracts Since inception in 2002, BBSDP approved 2,091 projects worth over R97 million To date, R56 million has been paid as grants to approved applicants Gauteng accounts for over 70% of the approved applications –Mpumalanga, 7% –Western Cape, 6% –Other, 17%

22 22 Black Business Supplier Development Programme …cont’d Most of the BBSDP funding was used for promotional materials, such as brochures and websites Although small in number, activities such as quality improvement, process and product improvements are found to have significant impact on assisted enterprises.

23 23 Technology and Human Resources for Industry Programme (THRIP) Administered by National Research Foundation (NRF) Matching grant fund with industry to promote industry relevant research and HR development at tertiary institutions and science councils the dti funds = R154,4 m Output for 2006/7: –338 projects –371 industrial partners (66% SMME’s) –3178 students (55% black, 36% female) Reviews: –2006: Government’s Principle mechanism to promote industry/academic partnerships –2007 OECD review: THRIP recognised internationally – particularly successful when compared with similar schemes in other countries

24 24 Support Programme for Industrial Innovation (SPII) Administered by Industrial Development Corporation (IDC) Matching grant fund with industry to promote industrial research and innovation within private sector enterprises the dti funds = R46,9m Output for 2006/7: –85 projects (> 80% SMMEs) –34% BEE –18% women-owned enterprises –Total Sales (2005/6): R312m (R173m exports) Reviews: –2006: Substantial contribution to innovation and SMMEs –2006: World Bank report: SPII one of best performers

25 25 SEDA Technology Incubators Administered by SEDA (ring-fenced) Technology incubator and technology transfer programme to support SMME’s in 18 technology incubators the dti funds = R49,4m Output for 2006/7: –Created 49 technology-based SMMEs –Supported 272 SMMEs and 414 clients (61% BEE and 19 % Women-owned enterprises, 753 jobs) –22 technology transfers (R9m) –All 2 nd economy interventions (100% BEE and 66% women-owned)

26 26 Export Marketing and Investment Assistance (EMIA) EMIA has been in existence since the mid ’90’s During the past 3 years EMIA assisted 3,447 SMEs to improve their export competitiveness through the following intervention: –National Pavilions and individual exhibitions to introduce SA products to foreign markets –Inward and Outward missions which allow networking between local and foreign enterprises –Primary Market Research to conduct product market research in potential markets

27 27 Export Marketing and Investment Assistance …cont’d Working with the Export Council, EMIA has capability to reach enterprise in various sectors of the economy.

28 28 Large Budget Film Production Rebate Introduced 30 June 2004 Objectives to attract large budget film productions into South Africa To date 17 productions have been completed and received rebates of R122 million The programme is being reviewed in order to introduce an incentive to promote smaller-budget local productions. OwnershipNumber of productions approved to date Qualifying SA Production Expenditure Rebate approved SA-owned productions15R733mR134m Co-productions3R118mR27m Foreign-owned productions20R1,102mR137m Totals38R1,953R298

29 29 Competitiveness Promotion Incentives The Competitiveness Fund (CF) and Sector Partnership Fund (SPF) were administered between 1999 and 2004 with the World Bank Programmes were discontinued in 2005 An objective was to support sustainable economic growth and job creation by enhancing competitiveness of SA enterprises: –CF approved 1,248 projects to the value of R230 million to implement firm level projects –SPF assisted 98 partnerships, involving more than 500 firms to the value of R66 million to encourage networking and information sharing Enterprises that were assisted through CF and SPF have on average enjoyed annual sales and export growth that was respectively 2% and 1% higher than comparative firms. There is a plan to re-establish the competitiveness promotion incentives with a view to support implementation of industrial policy

30 30 Recommendations from the Incentives Review Process Cluster incentive schemes according to generic themes: –Investment –Competitiveness –trade facilitation –Equity Select incentive recipient projects according to potential for additionality and public benefits criteria Apply conditions for reciprocity to allow claw-back where project fail to achieve agreed performance requirement Eligibility criteria for investment incentives to favour economies of scale, increase capacity and modernising capital equipment Adapt and repackage existing incentives into sector-specific programmes Improve monitoring and reporting on impact of incentives overall.

31 31 Action plan with new incentive programmes Investment Competitiveness Trade facilitation and export Small enterprise development and Equity Develop investment incentives to attract large projects Introduce sector targeted incentives for BPO, Film, Develop an incentive for the tourism sector Continue critical infrastructure programme New competitiveness promotion incentives; manufacturing excellence and industry upgrading Expansion of EMIA Project funding for emerging exporters Include BEE exporters Establishment of crafts export councils Business summits Revision of Small medium enterprise development programme (SMEDP) Expansion of Black supplier development programme (BBSDP) Roll out cooperatives Incentives available Roll out rebate for local film productions

32 32 Action Plan: Investment Incentives Critical infrastructure programme to continue until YYYY Sector targeted incentive: –BPO incentives launched on 15 Marc 2007 –Film incentives to be extended to promote local small-budget productions by Q2 –Tourism sector incentives to be introduced I Q3 Generic investment incentives to attract large investment project (FDI) by Q4

33 33 Industrial Development Zones (IDZs)

34 34 Medium Term Budget Allocation (MTEF) Incentive programmes2006/072007/082008/092009/10 Manufacturing Development programme1891 Enterprise Development598628659691 Business process outsourcing704060151 Film & television production incentive72176179182 Staple food fortification programee-15101 Sector development programme-102030 Export market and investment assistance9297101109 Competitiveness fund---- Sector partnership fund--- Black business supplier development programme25262728 Co-operative incentive scheme-14 34 Critical infrastructure programme863838799 Coega345510636866 East London5888154251 Richards Bay19294569 Totals1366202420012512

35 35 Thank you


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