Discussion Paper No. 98 of 2009 on Enhancing Competitiveness of Kenya's Cotton and Textile Sector
View/ Open
Publication Date
2009Author
Type
Discussion Paperviews
downloads
Metadata
Show full item recordBy
Onyango, Christopher; Miencha, Fred; Waiyaki Nicholas; Omiti, John & Kiringai, Jane
Abstract/ Overview
Cotton farming is a major source of livelihood for rural households in Kenya. It is characterized by a large number of small holder farmers, hence making it a priority crop for improving livelihood and reducing poverty. Besides, value added activities along the cotton value chain have potential for creating new jobs for semi and unskilled workers. Concerns about declining performance of the sector after liberalization of Kenya’s economy in the 1990’s generated efforts towards its revitalization and sustainable development. Domestically, the key issues have been high costs of inputs, particularly fertilizers and agrochemicals, supply of poor quality seed cotton, dilapidated and old machineries and weak institutional and commercial linkages. At the global level, cotton production and trade is highly distorted by subsidies particularly by the large players like the United States, China and the European Union. These and other factors have depressed domestic cotton productions leading to losses in incomes, unemployment and under utilized capacities. This study evaluated the cotton sector as an integrated production network where production is sliced into specialized activities and each activity is located where it can contribute the most to the value of the product. In this framework, institutional and governance structures are assumed to play a critical role in determining information flow about production and market attributes along the cotton value chain. The study established that opportunities for value adding activities exist at the four basic levels of the value chain; production, ginning, milling and markets. Furthermore, although Kenya has limited scope in the use of tariff measures due to existing trade commitments, simulation results indicate that increasing currently applied tariffs on imported textile products by 100 per cent can curb competitive pressure from imported cotton products, thereby encouraging increased domestic cotton production and capacity utilization. However, this requires appropriate product market regulations and incentives to generate trickle down effects by stimulating production of intermediate inputs and services along the value chain.
Publisher
The Kenya Institute for Public Policy Research and Analysis (KIPPRA)Series
DP/98/2009Collections
- Discussion Papers [327]
Related items
Showing items related by title, author, creator and subject.
-
Sessional Paper No. 01 of 1982 on Government Loan Guarantee of Loan to the Cotton Lint and Marketing Board (CLMB) from a Consortium of Local Bank for Financing the Cotton Processing and Marketing Product
Government of Kenya (Government of Kenya, 1982)In accordance with the provisions of the guarantee (Loans) Act (Cap 461) of the Laws of Kenya, the following information is laid before the National assembly Kenya government guarantee by government of the republic of Kenya ... -
Discussion Paper No. 229 of 2020 on Assessing the Cotton, Textile and Apparel Sector Employment Potential in Kenya
Malicha Wario & Njoroge Lawrence (The Kenya Institute for Public Policy Research and Analysis (KIPPRA), 2020)Cotton-textile and apparel (CTA) sector is arguably one of the industries with the potential to absorb skilled, semi-skilled, and non-skilled workers within its chain of production. This paper explores the CTA sector value ... -
Policy Brief No. 15 of 2021-2022 on Constraints along the Cotton Textile and Apparel Value Chain in Kenya
Njoroge, Lawrence & Malicha, Wario (Kenya Institute for Public Policy Research and Analysis (KIPPRA), 2021)The cotton-textile and apparel industry is recognized as one of the industries with potential to absorb skilled, semi-skilled, and non-skilled workers within its chain of production. In 1986, the cotton textile and apparel ...