Madagascar Industrial Development
Traffic on a street in Antananarivo
Courtesy J.D. von Pischke
After registering a negative average annual growth rate
of -
2.8 percent from 1981 to 1986, industrial development
improved
from 1987 to 1991 with a positive, albeit small, average
annual
growth rate of 1.1 percent. As of 1993, it was estimated
that
industrial output was responsible for 13 percent of GDP,
and that
the food-processing, mining, and energy sectors
contributed 65
percent of the manufacturing portion of this total.
The establishment of EPZs and the passage of a new
investment
code in 1990 contributed to an expansion of industrial
output
(see
table 5, Appendix). Despite the implications of the
title,
the EPZs do not require registered companies to establish
themselves in specific geographic zones but merely
constitute
entities that fall under a specific fiscal code. The EPZs
are
financially attractive in that registered companies only
pay one
tax on profits (impôt sur les bénéfices) and
another on
revenues from capital transfers (impôt sur les revenus
de
capitaux mobiliers), and, in the case of the former,
receive
an exemption of as much as the first fifteen years of
operation.
From 1990 to 1993, 100 new companies had established
themselves
in the EPZs, creating more than 17,500 jobs and generating
more
than US$113 million in foreign investments. The majority
of these
firms were distributed among three economic
sectors--clothing (48
percent), handicrafts (13 percent), and agro-processing (9
percent). Only 14 percent were owned by Malagasy; the
remainder
were owned by French (55 percent), Mauritian (16 percent),
South
African (4 percent), or other nationals (11 percent).
Another
7,000 jobs and US$70 million in investments were generated
by
more than 160 new companies taking advantage of the new
investment code. The creation by the International Finance
Corporation
(IFC--see Glossary)
in June 1994 of the US$2.6
million Madagascar Capital Development Fund is designed to
encourage Malagasy firms to establish themselves in the
EPZs.
Madagascar contains a wide variety of minerals, but
most of
the deposits exist in scattered and relatively
inaccessible
locations. The government nationalized all mineral
deposits in
1975, bringing mineral exploitation under the National
Military
Office for Strategic Industries (Office Militaire National
pour
les Industries Stratégiques). In 1990 a new mining
investment
code that encouraged private investment and exploitation
was
implemented, but the results have been disappointing.
Several
companies, including most recently Royal Dutch Shell,
which
disbanded its operations in early 1994, have sought
unsuccessfully to find petroleum.
In another venture, in August 1993, a Swiss enterprise,
International Capital and Securities Exchange, obtained
the right
to explore and mine for gold over a twenty-five-year
period.
French government sources estimate Madagascar's gold
production
at about three to four tons of gold annually and its
potential
yield double that. In 1992, however, as a result of
smuggling,
only thirty-seven kilograms of gold were officially
exported.
Madagascar has reserves of bauxite, chromite, graphite,
limestone, mica, nickel, and limestone. The exploitation
of these
minerals varies. More than 108,000 tons of chromium ores
and
concentrates, mostly in Andriamena in the central area and
near
Befandriana Avaratra on the north central area (Madagascar
is the
world's tenth largest producer), and 10,600 tons of
graphite were
successfully extracted in 1992. In contrast, the
production of
ilmenite ore, used in the manufacture of titanium, ceased
in 1977
(although a joint Malagasy-Canadian firm is expected to
resume
production beginning in 1995). In the southeast, some 100
million
tons of bauxite deposits at Manantenima in the southeast
are at
present unexploited. A variety of other minerals are mined
on a
small scale, including agate, beryl, quartz, garnet,
amazonite,
amethyst, moonstone, tourmaline, citrine, and a number of
abrasives and feldspars.
Madagascar depends completely on foreign imports to
satisfy
its oil needs, but it also refines some petroleum for
export.
Two-thirds of all electricity demand is met by production
from
seven hydroelectric power plants that serve Antananarivo,
Antsirabe, and the Andriamena chrome mine; the remaining
onethird is met by thermal stations. Many plants have their
own
small diesel or steam generators. Energy needs are also
met by
firewood and charcoal, which has contributed to the
precarious
nature of the country's forests and serious erosion
problems, and
by the bagasse from sugarcane used in sugar production;
two power
stations using bagasse as fuel and a solar energy plant
are
planned. Reserves of 100 million tons of coal are found
primarily
near Sakoa in the southwest, although less than 10,000
tons are
used on an annual basis. The government seeks to expand
domestic
coal use.
Another area that the government has begun to develop
is that
of tourism, which has good potential in view of
Madagascar's
exotic flora and fauna, and some 5,000 kilometers of
beaches. In
early 1989, the regime launched a tourism plan designed to
bring
in 100,000 tourists annually by 1995. Thus far, however,
the
greatest number of tourists attracted has been 52,900 in
1990,
compared with 250,000 on the much smaller island of
Mauritius. To
achieve its goal, Madagascar needs further infrastructure
in the
way of transportation, accommodations, and other
facilities, as
well as a greater sense of security on the part of
foreigners--in
1993 gendarmes shot two German researchers in error,
causing
Germany, which was Madagascar's second largest tourist
source, to
boycott the island.
Data as of August 1994
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