1 / 13

[IPAP 2012/17]

[IPAP 2012/17]. Address to the Portfolio Committee on Trade and Industry Wednesday 7 November 2012 Apparel Manufacturers of South Africa (AMSA). State of the SA Clothing Industry. Cheapest job creator at R20k per job Employs 57 000 formal employees

tinagrant
Download Presentation

[IPAP 2012/17]

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. [IPAP 2012/17] Address to the Portfolio Committee on Trade and IndustryWednesday 7 November 2012Apparel Manufacturers of South Africa (AMSA)

  2. State of the SA Clothing Industry • Cheapest job creator at R20k per job • Employs 57 000 formal employees • Represents at least 50% of total clothing jobs in SA • Biggest cost components: • Fabric (and other raw materials) 50-60% • Labour 25-35%

  3. Cost components State of the SA Clothing Industry • Fabric • Only 1% of woven fabric consumption is currently bought locally, and less than 40% of knitted fabric is bought locally • Over 80% of consumption imported, attracting 22% duty • Amortized this adds 15% to ex factory prices • Price differential local vs imports = 15-20%

  4. Cost components State of the SA Clothing Industry • Labour • New wage settlement for 2013 enables better management of labour costs • Improved relationship with Labour • In spite of some job losses, many companies have stabilised and grown

  5. Clothing and Textile Competitiveness Program

  6. Clothing and Textile Competitiveness Program Two components: • PI - Production Incentive • CTCIP - Clothing and Textile Competitiveness Improvement Program

  7. Clothing and Textile Competitiveness Program • PI - Production Incentive • Grants for training and capital expenditure based on % value-add • Great benefits to many companies • Not translated into job creation yet • Improved competitiveness • Cost reduction • Improved efficiencies • IDC challenges to smaller companies

  8. Clothing and Textile Competitiveness Program • CTCIP - Clothing and Textile Competitiveness Improvement Program • Cluster or Individual Company improvement projects • 75% or 65% subsidy for training and service providers • Many case studies of successes

  9. Designated sector for local procurement • Great Opportunities for clothing sector – large volumes in government procurement • Not aware of any new entrants to state tenders • Need improved transparency • Need assistance in process to become a supplier through successful tenders

  10. Opportunities and challenges • Fabric input costs • Duty relief immediately levels playing field to comparative imported clothing • Slow progress – 9 years • Only 30-40% of locally produced textiles goes into Apparel • Only 1% of Apparel’s woven fabric consumption is bought locally, and less than 40% of knitted. • The SA Textile industry is unable to supply the input needs of the apparel sector. • IMMEDIATE relief is needed

  11. Opportunities and challenges • PI and CTCIP • Real success stories in larger firms • Expand to make more accessible to smaller firms • Red tape re applications and submissions negatively affect the reaching of IPAP milestones • Local Procurement • Large volumes available in Government tenders • Assistance needed in order to open up successful tenders to clothing manufacturers who do not currently supply Government

  12. Opportunities and challenges • Illegal trading and under-invoicing • Lost opportunity for government in import duties • Lost opportunity and unfair competition to formal local manufacturers • SARS Customs and AMSA works closely together on reference pricing and peer group reviews. • Other challenges • Utility costs • Infrastructure • Transport • Fuel price • Volatile Rand

  13. SUMMARY • Clothing jobs stabilized for last year • Great opportunities for growth • Affordable job creator • Build on successes of PI and CTCIP • Fabric duty relief • Government tenders • Illegal trading

More Related