Agricultural enterprises hardest hit by COVID-19- EPRC report

A survey conducted by the Economic Policy Research Centre (EPRC), a leading independent policy think tank, indicates that agricultural enterprises in Uganda have been “worst hit” by the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the national economy.

The report, published May 12, shows that the COVID-19 pandemic and subsequent national lockdown have resulted in a 50% drop in overall business activity, with agricultural enterprises hardest hit due to challenges of accessing inputs arising from “transport restrictions” and the “ban on weekly markets”.

Of the 147 businesses surveyed across different regions in Uganda, 71% of agricultural enterprises experienced “severe decline in demand” compared to a 49.4% score on the same metric for all sectors.

The survey’s findings will be cause for concern to government, a key part of whose COVID-19 response was premised on the assumption that Uganda’s mostly rural, subsistence-oriented agriculture sector would remain largely unscathed by the restrictions related to the lockdown.

Hence, President Museveni permitted farmers to continue working their fields during the lockdown, and ordered that agricultural input stores remain open. Transportation of agricultural products was also allowed.

In adopting this stance, the president hoped to minimise the toll of the pandemic and its related restrictions on a sector that employs more than 70% of Ugandans and constitutes the heart of what Museveni refers to as Uganda’s “real economy”.

Perhaps due to these measures, the survey found that inputs for businesses in the agricultural sector have become relatively cheaper during this period, while 55% of businesses in other sectors reported an increase in input costs.

“…majority of the businesses in agriculture (43%) reported having experienced a decline in the price of input during the period. This could have been as a result of a fall in demand, which coincided with a buildup of inventory,” the EPRC report reads, in part.

This, the survey attributes to COVID-19 containment policies that include transport restrictions, quarantine, social distancing and ban on weekly markets, which hinder farmers’ access to input and output markets while also undermining their capacities to produce.

As such, whereas business activity was negatively impacted across the board, “sectoral analysis shows that businesses in agriculture experienced the largest decline in business activity with 76% of the firms reporting severe decline and 12% reporting moderate decline,” according to the report.

Hard times for small businesses

Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises (MSMEs) seem to be most adversely affected by the current business climate. In the EPRC’s estimation, majority of these small businesses have struggled to implement the mandated Standard Operating Procedures (SOPs) like provision of on-site accommodation for employees, in addition to having the mobility of their workers hampered by the March 25 ban on public transport.

Additionally, majority of these businesses (83%) are dogged by an acute decline in domestic demand for goods and services, a fact the policy researchers blamed on loss of income-earning opportunities.

Consumption of agricultural products was especially affected as demand for them is more “income elastic”, the report says.

Worker woes

76% of businesses under survey reported reducing their workforce size, due to risks presented by COVID-19 and subsequent lockdown measures. Of this, 29% reduced their employees by more than half.

Even here, businesses in the agricultural sector undertook the largest workforce restructuring, with 37% of the enterprises reducing their workforce by at least 50%, and another 44% by at least 26%.

Many private employers also reported implementing salary reduction measures for employees as part of efforts to stay afloat during this time.

EPRC warns that in the event of temporary closure, businesses in the agriculture and service sectors are less likely to compensate workers as these two sectors remain “more susceptible” to the adverse impact of COVID-19 on business operations compared to the manufacturing sector.

Explore regional markets

The Economic Policy Research Centre has advised local firms to explore regional markets within the East African Community (EAC) and the Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa ( COMESA) for their current input needs, rather than depending solely on international suppliers for raw materials.

The policy experts hold that such disruptions present Uganda with a clear opportunity to develop its domestic value chains in order to ensure that businesses have stable sources of inputs while saving scarce foreign exchange.

Proposed interventions

Although government has started a phased but careful partial lifting of the lockdown, the EPRC report expressed fear that majority of Uganda’s SMEs face collapse should the current situation persists for 1-3 months more.

The think tank therefore suggested several interventions that the government can take to offer relief to distressed businesses, including cuts on tax rates, reducing taxable income, offering tax credits and tax refunds. They further advise that government pay all its outstanding arrears to suppliers and either put in place or strengthen existing export financing and credit insurance mechanisms.

”The support should target the most affected firms to preserve scarce fiscal resources and help to ensure that firms receive an adequate level of support in line with their immediate needs, given the short-term effect of the shock,” the EPRC report reads, in part.

Projections by the International Monetary Fund’s (IMF) Global Economic Outlook indicate that the world economy will contract sharply by 3% in 2020 as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, while Sub-Saharan Africa’s economy is expected to contract by 1.6%.

The post Agricultural enterprises hardest hit by COVID-19- EPRC report appeared first on The Cooperator News.

Masaka Cooperative Union donates food items to fasting Muslims and COVID-19 task force

Masaka Cooperative Union Limited has donated food items to the COVID-19 task forces in the districts of Masaka, Bukomansimbi, Kalungu, Sembabule and Lwengo to support needy communities in the area.

The donations that were handed over to the respective task forces on Friday and Saturday include 4000kg of maize flour, to be distributed among people hardest hit by lockdown restrictions.

The cooperative also donated 1000kg of rice, 200kg of sugar, ten boxes of soap and cooking oil to the fasting Muslim community in Masaka.

Sarah Nabbanja, the SACCO Manager, Masaka Cooperative Union Savings and Credit Society, while handing over the items, noted that the board found it necessary to support the community in these trying times.

“This is our humble contribution to supplement the support of other players that have come in to help those people in need. We chose this as part of our Corporate Social Responsibility,” she noted.

Nabbanja explained that, by default, the beneficiaries of the relief support items are in some way connected to members of the Cooperative Union who are scattered in the different primary societies across the sub region.

“We are certainly giving back to the community that supports and has this cooperative union at heart.”

Herman Ssentongo and Jjuuko Kasiita, the Masaka and Lwengo Resident District Commissioners, appreciated the support from the cooperative, saying would help them solve some food challenges they have been facing in their districts.

Sheikh Ahmed Kayemba, the Secretary General of Masaka Muslim District Council also thanked the union for acknowledging the significance of fasting in the Islamic faith and accepting to sharing with them.

Sheikh Kayemba, however, challenged the union’s management to work towards full revival of the farmers’ cooperative which he says was of great importance to the coffee business in the sub region.

Masaka Cooperative Union Limited, was one of Uganda’s most prominent coffee farmers’ unions, but suffered a setback due to the political strife that befell the country in the 1970’s and 80’s. Of late, efforts are being made to restore the union to its former glory.

The post Masaka Cooperative Union donates food items to fasting Muslims and COVID-19 task force appeared first on The Cooperator News.

Over 200 acres of crops destroyed by hailstorm in Masindi

More than 300 farmers from five villages in Pakanyi Sub County in Masindi district are counting losses following a hailstorm which destroyed over 200 acres of crops on Wednesday this week.

The affected villages include Kiruli I, Kiruli II, Kiruli Central, Nyakakoma and Kitanyata, all in Pakanyi Sub County, Masindi district.

Pakanyi Sub County is the food basket of Masindi district, and the only one in the entire district that is still predominantly dedicated to growing food crops as others have ventured into non-food cash crops like sugarcane.

The hailstorm levelled several maize, sugar cane, cassava, soya bean and banana plantations, among others.

According to the LC 1 Chairperson Kiruli I village, Nasuru Aheebwa, over 250 homesteads lost their crops, yet majority had taken small loans to inject into their farming.

“Many farmers from this area use money from village saving groups to do farming”, Aheebwa said.

Patrick Aguda, one of the farmers who lost 15 acres of maize is worried he will be unable to repay an agricultural loan he took from Post Bank to invest in his farm.

“I used over Shs 10m to open up the 15 acres of maize; I don’t know how I will pay it back,” he said.

Equally vexed is James Alinaitwe, a resident of Kitanyata village who borrowed Shs 2m from a village saving group in order to open up four acres of farmland for a maize plantation, and lost it all to the hailstorm.

“Now the loan is continuing to grow and I have nowhere to go. All my focus was on my maize plantation,” he lamented.

Margaret Kabaruli, the Kiruli Parish Councillor says that this is the second such destructive hailstorm to hit the area.

“The first was in 2016 and it was just as bad as this one, but we got no help [from government],” said Kabaruli who lost a calf in the latest weather incident.

“We call upon the Ministry of Disaster Preparedness to come to our rescue since residents have nothing to eat,” she appealed.

Aled Akugizibwe, a resident of Kiruli Parish appealed to the Ministry of Bunyoro affairs to aid affected locals with relief items like food and planting materials.

Kabajungu Flora, an elderly grandmother taking care of 5 grandchildren lost her entire maize, ground nuts, beans and banana crop, and says she now has nothing to feed her children especially during the current COVID-19 situation.

“I am appealing to the Masindi district COVID-19 task force to give me relief food since I have nothing to feed my children,” she said.

The Masindi district disaster preparedness focal person, Richard Kiiza, said that the Pakanyi sub county chief had been instructed to assess the magnitude of the matter in order to enable them take appropriate action.

He however, attributed the continued hailstorms in Pakanyi to environmental destruction by the locals.

The post Over 200 acres of crops destroyed by hailstorm in Masindi appeared first on The Cooperator News.

Bunyoro Growers Cooperative Union demands Shs 4 billion compensation from government

Bunyoro Growers’ Cooperative Union Limited is demanding over Shs 4 billion in compensation from government for losses caused by NRA liberation war in the 1980s.

Barnabas Barugahara, the cooperative’s Manager, says several of the co-op’s assets were vandalized during the war, including tractors, a fully fledged machine workshop, lorries, trucks, and a cotton ginnery. Also lost were the union’s cattle and goats ranches, along with over 500 heads of cattle and goats.

According to Wilson Byaruhanga the Union’s vice Chairperson, the union submitted a war claim to government amounting to Shs 5.2 billion for assets, stocks, vehicles and livestock lost during the liberation war.

Following an April 2018 verification visit by a government-appointed verification committee, the total amount owed to the Union was established at Shs 4.8bn.

Byaruhanga revealed that since then they have been following up on the claim with relevant ministries, and substantial progress had been made. However, promised payments on the same are yet to materialise.

“We had been promised partial payments before the end of FY 2019/20, but nothing much has materialised yet,” he said.

Crippled services

More than just lost property, Barugahara says the insurgency-related disruption crippled the union’s ability to offer key services to members.

Bunyoro Growers’ Cooperative Union was formed and registered in 1954 to offer marketing services to its primary cooperative societies which were confronting difficulties finding market for members’ crops like coffee, cotton and other produce.

Other services included extending credit, training cooperators, transporting produce, delivering agricultural inputs and advisory extension services.

“All these services were crippled by the liberation war of 1980s,” Barugahara said.

He added that many members were deprived of employment either directly or indirectly, which negatively impacted economic development, among other adverse effects.

“Therefore, to reverse the trend, Bunyoro Growers’ Cooperative Union has been requesting government to consider compensating them for the losses caused by the liberation struggle so that the union could concentrate on agriculture,” he said.

Longstanding claims

The union has had ongoing engagements with government over its compensation claims as well as other unfulfilled pledges.

For instance, Barugahara said, on November 12, 2009, then Minister of Trade and Industry, Maj. General Kahinda Otafire, pledged that the union would be given a fleet of five trucks and five tractors as government’s contribution to its revitalization process.

“Since then, several visits and reminders have been made to the office of the minister but in vain,” the manager said.

“With the appointment of the Minister of State for Bunyoro Affairs, Hon Ernest Kiiza we anticipated that this had given the union leverage to once again engage the government so as to quicken the process of compensation but it has still remained unresolved,” he added.

Wilson Byaruhanga, the Union’s vice Chairperson explained that currently the union’s sources of income consist of office and stores rentals, a cattle ranch, maize mill and a machine fabrication workshop.

He added that if the government compensated them, they would be able to improve their business and reduce poverty among the members by offering better services and at subsidized costs.

He also expressed his hope that more government initiatives, such as the Operation Wealth Creation (OWC), be channelled through cooperatives to ensure their future stability.

The post Bunyoro Growers Cooperative Union demands Shs 4 billion compensation from government appeared first on The Cooperator News.

Kasese border market closed for breaching COVID-19 guidelines

Kasese’s Mpondwe-Lhubiriha market, which straddles the Uganda-DRC border, has been closed for failure to comply with government directives to combat the spread of the novel Coronavirus.

Kasese Resident District Commissioner (RDC), Lt. Joe Walusimbi ordered the shutdown of the market last Tuesday on grounds that vendors were in breach of the Ministry of Health’s guidelines on social distancing.

“I will not allow anyone to continue working if they cannot follow the guidelines,” the RDC vowed.

The next day (Wednesday), while addressing traders at Kisanga market (commonly known as Mawa market), he gave them a one-day ultimatum to comply with the directives or face the same fate as Mpondwe-Lhubiriha market.

Twice a week- on Mondays and Tuesdays- Mawa market attracts more than 2000 traders and tens of thousands of customers from all districts of western Uganda and from the DRC, all of whom cram into the market’s crowded space.

“From today, no weekly markets are allowed. We have levelled the inside of the market to accommodate all vendors. Those who are unwilling will not be allowed to work on streets until the directive is lifted,” he said, adding that failure to comply would lead to unilateral closure of the market.

He further ordered relocation of fish traders to an open space outside the market on Park drive in order to decongest the market.

In addition to Mpondwe-Lhubiriha, Bwera market was also closed for failure to observe social distancing and provide hand washing facilities, among other infractions.

Traders comply

When theCooperator visited Mawa market a day later, the RDC’s warning seemed to have taken effect, with several vendors at the market opting to work in shifts in order to observe the social distancing guidelines.

According to Richard Kimeze, the Chairperson of Mawa market vendors, the more than 600 vendors based in the market had agreed to work in shifts at 104 stalls demarcated by Municipal authorities to meet the 4-metre distance requirement.

“We [vendors] today resolved to start working in shifts so that we beat the 4-metre social distance as per presidential directive as one of the ways to control the spread of deadly COVID-19 disease,” Kimeze said.

Margret Birungi, the in-charge of hygiene and sanitation at the market hopes that the recently enforced spacing will result in improved hygiene within Mawa market.

“The market has been dirty because of congestion. We hope it will improve because of the distancing, and that traders will be better able to control their garbage,” she said.

She advised her fellow traders to observe social distance so that the market remains operational or else their children would starve during the quarantine.

The post Kasese border market closed for breaching COVID-19 guidelines appeared first on The Cooperator News.

Farmers frustrated over low banana prices

Banana farmers in Uganda’s western region have expressed frustration over the current spell of low produce prices that threatens to drive many out of business.

Jomo Mugabe, a renowned farmer in Rukindo, Mbarara Municipality, maintains a 70-acre banana plantation. However, is bitter that he is receiving “peanuts” from the sale of matooke from his farm, as banana prices in the region continue to plummet.

“The price of bananas has reduced from Shs 20,000 a bunch, to between Shs 3,000-4,000 at farm gate. At such prices we are not making any profit. We cannot even afford to pay workers,” he said.

Mugabe, who harvests more than 10,000 bunches of banana every three weeks and employs 15 workers, believes that if the low prices persist, many farmers will quit growing the crop that is a staple for millions of Ugandans.

“I have been farming for many years but have reached a level of failing because the prices of bananas have reduced so much. If it persists like this then it means that we are going to get away from farming,” he said.

However, according to Asaph Muhangi, the Chairperson Rwampara district, the drop in prices is simply a result of market forces.

“People have grown bananas on a large scale meaning that the supply is high and demand low,” he explained. This surplus production, Muhangi said, coupled with competition from other food commodities on the local, has resulted in low prices for bananas.

Promote export, value addition

Muhangi proposed export promotion as a possible solution, saying bananas are in demand on the world market, including in countries like China, India and the USA.

“We had suggested that government should import coolers and Germany was willing to provide them, but the project proposal failed somewhere along the way. As we speak, we cannot export fresh matooke even up to Kenya,” he said.

He also called for increased investment in value addition for banana on a large scale, saying the local processing facilities are inadequate to absorb the available supply.

“The banana factory we have in Nyaruzinga Bushenyi produces very little compared to the amount of matooke we have in the region. Can you imagine the whole regional banana factory processes only one lorry per week?” he asked.

Muhangi further urged farmers to take charge of their own marketing and avoid brokers and middle men who, he said, tend to offer low prices at farm gate.

“Do not grow your crops waiting for others to trade them for you,” he advised. “If famers like Mugabe took their bananas direct to Kampala, they would not be cheated by the middle men at all,” he explained.

The district Chairman believes that farmer organizations can do more in obtaining more favourable prices and farming conditions for their members.

“We have weak farmer organizations which should be working to reduce production costs by helping farmers obtain inputs equipment, agrichemicals and fertilizers at cheaper rates; but farmer cooperatives are so weak that they cannot even market their own products,” Muhangi said.

Prepare for post COVID-19 opportunities

Chairman Muhangi called upon farmers to prepare to take advantage of the post-COVID-19 period which, he predicts, will come with heightened demand for food.

“I see a bright future for bananas now because this global pandemic is likely to result in a global food crisis,” he opined.

However, Mugabe appealed for increased government support if farmers are to benefit from any possible opportunities after the pandemic.

“Government should find ways to support farmers financially, especially those who grow perishable crops. We need low-interest business loans if we are to survive,” he said.

The post Farmers frustrated over low banana prices appeared first on The Cooperator News.

Uganda loses $270,000 per day to smuggling – URA

According to the Uganda Revenue Authority (URA), government loses at least $270,000 (about Shs 985 million) per day to smuggling in unpaid taxes and some officials in the tax body are complicit in turning a blind eye to the vice.

This was revealed to theCooperator by the then Commissioner-General of URA, Ms. Doris Akol, during a phone interview conducted prior to her replacement.

The annual Performance Report of 2018 jointly authored by ActionAid and Civil Society Budget Advocacy Group (CSBAG), both civil society entities that have been involved in fighting the outflow, support this assertion.

The report reads in part that, “More than $3,240,000 which is Shs11.8 billion flows out of Uganda annually as smuggling is aided by some of the corrupt border officials fuelling this phenomenon,” referring to Uganda’s loss to Illicit Financial Flows (IFFs).

Smuggling is a global issue that is difficult to curb given its complex operations and the diverse commodities and persons involved.

Global Financial Integrity, a non-profit, Washington, DC-based research entity explains smuggling as a form of IFFs, broadly known as the movements of money and value from one country to another, especially money and value that are illicitly earned, illicitly transferred and illicitly utilised.

Smuggling is common on the Uganda-Kenya border towns of Busia and Malaba as it is practiced by the seemingly innocent women, disabled persons and children who are paid to do that by rich traders.

Others pose as relatives going to mourn their loved ones across Kenya’s border yet their aim is to smuggle merchandise, denying government $270,000 revenue per day.

Jabweli Okello, 43, a smuggler at Malaba border says, “It’s the biting poverty that forced me into illegal trade and I know it. However, it has helped me to flourish in these difficult times.”

Okello (not real name), a renowned smuggler in eastern Uganda, owns a number of taxis that ply the Malaba-Kampala highway and he recently won a tender to manage a taxi park in Malaba Town Council in Tororo district.

Travellers are able to cross with commodities such as cigarettes, clothes, sugar and other general merchandise which they stuff into their clothing unnoticed by the border authorities.

Moses Musira, an independent tax policy analyst says, “It’s a hard thing for the government to think that it can stop smuggling. No. You cannot. There are government officials who benefit a lot out of smuggling and have amassed untold wealth, and government knows it.”

“Even those who work with URA are part of the clique,” he exclaimed, saying, “A businessman can smuggle five cars and give one car to URA officials because he knows how much he stands to gain from the four cars.”

Combating IFFs

Akol says URA is ready to support any campaign meant to combat IFFs into the country.

She made these remarks while in a stakeholders meeting with other institutions like the Southern and Eastern African Trade, Information and Negotiations Institute (SEATINI) in Kampala recently.

“URA is already involved in some aspects of curbing IFFs. Our plan is to increase the collection of domestic revenue through stopping IFFs, especially arising from smuggling, misinvoicing, transfer pricing and other forms of aggressive tax evasion,” Akol said.

However, Musira says: “The only remedy for smuggling is to have it reduced but nobody should deceive the public that it can be stopped.”

He says for countries that share common borders to reduce the rate of smuggling, they should sensitize and educate their citizens around the border against the vice.

“Uganda should ensure that it enforces pro-people tax policies that don’t deny people access to basic commodities.”

Musira cites a case in point where authorities in Kenya have banned cheap milk imports that flood their markets in order to protect local farmers and revive the agricultural sector.

“This kind of restriction encourages smuggling by those traders who cannot afford to buy Kenyan expensive products; they will be propelled to engage in the smuggling of Ugandan cheap products,” Musira sums up.

The Town Clerk, Busia Town Council, Vincent Okurut, in a telephone interview, says, “The problem of smuggling can only be stopped by enforcement of tough restrictions at entry points.

Julius Mukunda, the CSBAG executive director, says the economies of small towns are dependent on smuggling as a number of citizens engage themselves in the practice in order to earn a living.

Unfortunately, to Mukunda, this affects the abilities of URA to generate the expected revenue as much is lost through smuggling.

“Smuggling at the border towns affects youths negatively as most of them opt to smuggle and earn quick petty cash as opposed to attending school. This not only affects the families of these youths but also impedes government from achieving its overall objective of improving literacy,” Mukunda says.

Mukunda adds that the robust solution to smuggling is for government to impose heavier fines and penalties on smugglers.

This story was produced by www.thecooperator.news. It was written as part of Wealth of Nations, a media skills development programme run by the Thomson Reuters Foundation in partnership with the Institute for the Advancement of Journalism. More information at www.wealth-of-nations.org. The content is the sole responsibility of the author and the publisher.

The post Uganda loses $270,000 per day to smuggling – URA appeared first on The Cooperator News.