Responsible Entities

Responsible Entities

Date 9/15/2021

Responsible Entities

Date

Responsible Entities

Date

  • Access to affordable finance.

Responsible Entities

Date 6/30/2020

  • Encourage the banking sector to provide low-cost loans and short-, medium, and long-term finance to the industry. 
  • Review the status of the distressed factories and explore different mechanisms, including creating a special fund, that will help them operate at maximum capacity.

Responsible Entities

Date 6/30/2020

  • Outdated machinery and equipment that are used in the different stages of the textile manufacturing process.

  • To improve quality and increase production, extend assistance and incentives to factories that import new machinery and equipment for use in the different processes (spinning, weaving, dyeing, printing, and finishing). Grant textile factories a 50% tax exemption for 5 years, and ready-made garment factories a 25% tax exemption for 3 years. 
  • Exempt existing factories that expand operations and new textiles factories from taxes for 10 years.

  • Weak linkages among the key manufacturing processes—spinning, weaving, dyeing, printing, finishing, and other upstream industries.

  • Attract domestic and foreign investors in the textile industries, whether in single projects or textile cities. 
  • Encourage the development of textile cities, focusing on governorates in the Delta and Upper Egypt to boost their development.

  • Cotton-relevant Agriculture Policy 

  • Expand the cultivation of short- and medium-staple cotton instead of importing them.
  • Continue with cultivating long-staple cotton, taking into account the quantity that can be exported and the needs of the local industry.
  • Encourage investment in ready-made garment industries that use long-staple cotton.
  • Allow cotton imports from all countries and repeal the decision that limits importing to specific countries.

  • The Industrial Control Authority has weak capacities to carry out its functions, including the calculation of the waste percentages for manufacturers.

  • Develop and modernize the Industrial Control Authority and provide it with updated electronic systems that can assist with calculating the waste and damage percentages to ensure fairness and equity in treating exporters. 

  • The processing time for export rebates and VAT refunds is lengthy. 

  • Expedite the processing of refunds and set a timeframe, not to exceed 90 days from the time all documents are submitted, for disbursing the funds; export assistance should be linked to the percentage of domestic value added in the given export, in accordance with the rules of Egyptian origin. 

  • The high production costs; the natural gas prices are particularly high despite the fact that textile industries are labor-intensive industries; the gas producing companies deal with this issue in a high-handed manner. 

  • Review natural gas prices; charge the textile industries the same natural gas price charged to brick factories.
  • Reduce the price of water supplied to the textile industries; water is an essential component in all the  different manufacturing processes—spinning, weaving, dyeing, printing, and finishing

  • Labor shortage and inadequacy of the industrial training offered in technical and vocational education and training institutions. 

  • Link enrollment in industrial technical schools to the needs of industries.
  • Make available training centers and specialized industrial technical schools in all industrial areas; ensure that the schools have appropriate departments that are aligned with the needs of the industries in the area, and the needs of the geographic area in general. 
  • The Micro, Small, and Medium-sized Enterprises Development Agency (MSMEDA) should expand the provision of training through its training centers. 
  • The Textile Industries Chamber and the training centers should collaborate and coordinate their efforts with regards to the design of the centers’ training policy and programs to ensure that factories have access to skilled labor. 
  • MSMEDA should coordinate with the Textile Industries Chamber to make available loans to support the textile industries; MSMEDA is the best fit for this vital role, especially after the amendment of its governing law.