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Promoting Trade and Investment Globally
Successes in Agri-business in CARIFORUM: Lessons learnt
Brussels, July 11th 2014
15 Countries
23.4 million persons
5 Official languages
10 Free Trade Agreements Preferential access +/- 1 billion consumers
CARIFORUM– Gateway to the world
1 Heart
The Caribbean Export Development Agency was established in 1996 by an Inter-Governmental Agreement and is the regional trade development and investment promotion agency of the 15 CARIFORUM States. The Agency is governed by a Board of Directors (public and private) appointed by each CARIFORUM State. The Board is accountable to the CARIFORUM Council of Ministers.
Caribbean Export – Who are we?
Caribbean Export is proud to partner with the CARICOM/CARIFORUM Secretariat and the European Union (EU) in promoting the sustainable development of the CARIFORUM States.
Caribbean Export is currently implementing various European Development Fund (EDF) programmes, all of which seek to “contribute to the gradual integration of CARIFORUM countries into the world economy enhancing regional economic growth and by extension alleviate poverty.”
Caribbean Export and the European Union
1. Enhance the Competitiveness and Promote Innovation of the CARIFORUM's private sector;
2. Promote Trade, Export Development and Investment among CARIFORUM States and between them and the world;
3. Support to the development of policy and regulatory frameworks with special attention to the services sector; and
4. Support greater cooperation between the Dominican Republic and Haiti in the areas of Trade, Investment Promotion, Customs and Private Sector Development.
Objectives of the Caribbean Export – European Union Cooperation
Sustainable
Development
Business climate
reform
Infrastructure-
Investment
Direct support to SMEs Strenghtening BSOs
Promoting Competitiveness in CARIFORUM
BRIDGETOWN, Barbados, Wednesday February 12, 2014, CMC - The Caribbean Development Bank (CDB) Tuesday said that regional countries experienced average economic growth of 1.5 per cent last year as compared with 1.2 per cent in 2012…the CDB said the region is likely to record average economic growth of 2.3 per cent in 2014. (Source: CDB)
GDP Growth in 2013 - Dominican Republic 4.1% and Haiti 4.3% (Source: World Bank)
CARIFORUM context: Slow Growth
Country Agriculture (% of GDP)
1980 1990 2000 2005 2013
Antigua & Barbuda 7.1 4.2 3.9 3.7 2.0
Barbados 7.0 7.0 6.3 5.8 3.0
Belize 27.4 20.0 17.2 16.6 12.1
Dominica 30.7 25.0 18.1 18.7 21.0
Dominican Rep. 20.1 13.4 11.1 15.1 8.0
Guyana 23.4 38.1 31.1 26.0 21.0
Haiti na na na 28.0 24.1
Jamaica 9.1 8.1 6.7 5.0 6.3
Suriname 10.1 9.5 9.2 9.6 10.9
Trinidad & Tobago 3.0 2.3 0.9 0.8 0.3
CARIFORUM context: Economies in Transition
Source: World Bank
Fierce competition in local markets;
Lack of adequate human resources;
Harsh financing conditions;
Insufficient infrastructure and Institutional framework;
Expensive & unreliable transportation;
Low product recognition;
Difficulty in competing in world market (price, quantity, packaging, standards, distribution, market knowledge…);
Difficulty in travelling to markets - visa issue;
Few and unreliable trade and economic statistics;
Outdated and/or unsuitable technology;
Economic and Environmental vulnerability…
Challenges for CARIFORUM’s Private Sector
Globalisation has changed the way people live and trade. Innovations in ITC and transport have shrunk the dimensions of time and space and expanded the notion of markets. Competition has become fiercer, we have loss preferential access to traditional markets putting a supplementary strain on the competitiveness of our SME’s. Therefore, the need to re-establish our competitiveness exploiting that “Je ne sais quoi” that makes us, Caribbean people, special, seeking the vertical and horizontal integration of our economies, creating strategic alliances and offering appealing products and services.
The New CARIFORUM Paradigm
Faced with “Adapt to Survive” situation following the dismantling of the preferential regime for ACP bananas in the EU Market - WTO.
Case Study 1: Jamaica Producer’s Group
(former Jamaica Banana Producers Ass.)
Strategic decisions:
Move Up the Value Chain - enter snack market (2013: 1 million units/week) with diversified offer (plantain, cassava, sweet potato and breadfruit chips) Invest in new products/services: “Tortuga International”, “Blue Mountain coffee”, “RAM Shipping” & “Hoogesteger” (NL)
Results: “JP Europe had 2013 profits of $183.9 million up 133% from $78.9 million in 2012. The revenues of $5.47 billion were up 16% from the prior year” (http://www.jpjamaica.com)
Case Study 2: Dominican Republic’s
Confederation of Cocoa Farmers (CONACADO)
DR cocoa farmers faced with low and volatile price of their crops in the international market
Strategic decisions:
Regroup in a Confederation 1988 Organic (1991) and Fair Trade (1995) certified Work with government, leading private associations and international donors to promote sector Promote R&D and best practices
Results:
DR is largest exporter of organic cocoa in the world CONACADO regroups 152 small farmers associations representing 8,500 affiliates
The promotion of a strong brands helps reduce the volatility of exports.
The Caribbean is widely recognized as a good place to live in. We should capitalize on this positive image and use our Heritage, Culture, Diversity, Identity, “Savoir- faire”, Uniqueness, … to develop brands with a view to successfully penetrating international markets.
We should develop compelling stories around products and services that offer authenticity appealing to select consumers.
Case study 3: Translating
“The Caribbean” into brands
Lessons Learnt: WHERE, WHAT, & HOW are crucial to achieve competitiveness
WHERE: Market segments in which we have a competitive advantage: Niche, Luxury, Fair Trade, Organic, Diaspora … Need to know and understand the trends and expectations of target markets. Engage in market intelligence activities.
WHAT: The products we offer, not competing on price or quantity but in quality and uniqueness. Adapt our products to the specificities of target markets: labeling, packaging, taste, standards…
Proposals: WHERE, WHAT, & HOW are crucial to achieve competitiveness
HOW:
Creating own brands; Exchange and promotion of best practices; Tailored capacity building initiatives; Promotion of standards; Organic, Fair Trade and Quality certifications; Invest in productivity, logistics, energy efficiency…; Working with technical centers and universities in R&D; Industry wide cooperation via clusters and associations; Promotion of value-added chains; Vertical and horizontal integration; Links to tourism, sports and cultural industries...
Lessons Learnt: WHERE, WHAT, & HOW are crucial to achieve competitiveness
Region Wide Public-Private Sector Dialogue - Colloquium; Direct support to SMEs via competitive procedure - DAGS ; Food Safety Call for Proposals with IICA and CROSQ (ongoing); Training in quality, production, export marketing, trade regimes, customs...- GIZ, ITC, OECS EDU, ADOEXPO, JAMPRO, CCIH, SELA, OTN, IADB, WCO...; Branding Support for SMEs;
Examples of Caribbean Export –EU support Caribbean Export - EU: Promoting the competitiveness of Caribbean Agribusiness
Regional image building/branding with CARICOM and CAIPA - PROINVEST, GIZ, UK, WB, Canada, CDB, IADB, OAS, USA, Turkey, China… Market Promotion Platform: Caribbean Kitchen; Trade Missions and Fairs: UK, Fancy Food, ANUGA, SIAL, Expo-Jamaica, Expo-Cibao, TIC, Agroalimentaria, FIHAV, Korea - IADB, UK, CANADA, CDB…
Examples of Caribbean Export –EU support Caribbean Export - EU: Promoting the competitiveness of Caribbean Agribusiness
Technical Study Tours (France/Belgium, UK, Germany, Brazil Chile, Nicaragua, Turkey, Guadeloupe, - PROINVEST & BIZCLIM...); Trade Policy support for CARIFORUM States and Secretariat; Promotion of Joint Bi-National Standards (Haiti-DR); Trade publications/studies (EPA, OCT-FCORS, CARICOM-DR,); Support to clusters: Coconut (CARIFORUM) , Cocoa (DR-Haiti), Pineapple (DR), Mangoes (Haiti-DR)…
Examples of Caribbean Export - EU support 2/2 Examples of Caribbean Export –EU support Caribbean Export - EU: Promoting the competitiveness of Caribbean Agribusiness