‘Incubation centre’ key to manufacturing lead growth

Published Mar 4, 2016

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Reviewing the current “incubation centre” framework is key to the growth and development of the supply chain in South Africa’s vehicle sector, as well as creating shared value for those living and working around motor manufacturing.

Efforts to enhance downstream localisation in the vehicle manufacturing process is a significant trigger for manufacturing lead growth in South Africa.

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Not only does this create an environment where we can partner with the government to stimulate shared value in a globally relevant and competitive vehicle sector, but it forms a sustainable foundation for local/regional supply chain development, job creation and skills promotion over the next years.

As we see heightened competition between countries to attract new production facilities (including from some markets in Africa), the local automotive sector will need to accelerate its efforts to address competitive levers such as investments in new technology (including electrification of mobility), entrenchment of world-class quality processes in our manufacturing and meaningful investment in skills development and skills transfer.

Investment in skills

In South Africa specifically, we need to use this as an opportunity to proactively undertake to empower communities and industry around our operations directly.

It is here where we are able to use our investment in skills to build a supply chain that is helping to drive the competitiveness of automotive as a sector, but at the same time it is also creating economic value which is both complementary and independent of the sector as a whole.

It is this “tertiary” evolution of our regional supply network that will trigger capital expenditure, grow the government’s tax base and drive manufacturing output and employment. All positive economic contributors.

Indeed, it is in partnering with the government that we are able to create an environment where together we can develop companies that produce local content for the vehicle sector, while at the same time producing for large industry as a whole.

For this to happen we need to reinvent the structure of current “incubation centres” to one where the vehicle sector provides the framework for skills and operations and where the government acts as a shareholder in providing the appropriate development funding. More importantly, this should be prioritised and accelerated.

To-date, our investments in a new training centre will provide an opportunity to transfer technical skills into other industries.

So while the government is “looking for jobs”, we can meaningfully contribute to this goal through amplifying current incubation centres and associated broader supply networks. Both are direct levers of labour (jobs) and sustainable skills.

Opportunities

So while the current employment multiplier of the industry is 1.6 (that is 1.6 employment opportunities are created for every one prospect realised in the industry) it makes sense that our focus on meaningfully capitalising on this should be a priority.

It follows this course that a partnership between the vehicle sector and the government will engender a tremendous advantage for South Africa, as well as a direct benefit for those living and working around the sector.

Working with the government to build a bigger and better supply network (read more mature and more globally competitive) will allow us to lift local content levels significantly. The direct and indirect benefits of this go without saying.

To some degree BMW’s announcement that it will invest around R6 billion in producing the BMW X3 is a catalyst for this. We welcome this as an opportunity to stimulate enhanced contribution to the country as a whole, as we bring more and more suppliers into the fold.

This is most definitely not a quick fix, but it does simultaneously address gaps in empowerment and in how the automotive sector can contribute to manufacturing lead growth.

It starts with producing the right car for the right markets, as production continues to follow demand.

The BMW X3 itself will become an increasingly relevant product in South Africa, but also as the automotive sector expands globally and into the rest of the continent.

Localisation of content is key to this expansion. It is something we welcome and it is something we will play a committed and active part in as an economic and social priority.

* Tim Abbott is BMW Group South Africa’s managing director.

** The views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of Independent Media.

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