Growing up, Tobias Alando
dreamed of becoming a spy, inspired
by his father’s career in the police
service and a family-owned investigative firm.
However, he ended up as an Information and Communication Technologies expert, who would later
become the Kenya Association of
Manufacturers (KAM) chief executive.
He now leads the country’s industrial growth agenda as the government targets to have the sector
contribute about 20 per cent to the
GDP by 2030.
The Star sought to know who Alando is and his agenda for the industry.
Who is Alando, where was he born,
where did he go to school and what
has his career been like?
Tobias Alando was born in Mombasa but grew up in Nairobi.
In terms
of school, I went to Maranda High
School and then India for my bachelor’s in computer science.
I also did my postgraduate course
in Management Information Systems
and then master’s in management
and leadership at the Management
University of Africa.
I started working in the IT field and would later
join KAM as a sector officer, dealing
with exports. I worked a lot with the Kenya Revenue Authority and KPA.
That is where I grew my skills, including knowledge about the manufacturing sector and exports.
Then what?
I was selected by a US-affiliated
chamber of commerce as one of the
rising star chamber staff and went
to the US for internship for three
months.
I went to the Rapid City
Chamber so I am a graduate of the Rapid
City Chamber class of 2007.
I served in Mombasa for about five years before I was promoted to
head the membership arm of KAM
in 2010.
This is where I understood
a lot of policies in the manufacturing
sector. Another portfolio was added
to me so I became head of membership and governance.
In terms of the
top role, I first acted but after interviews, someone else was appointed
as the CEO and I was given the chief
operating officer role, which I served
in for about three years.
I was then
given an opportunity to serve as the
CEO, so that is the journey about
my career.
In terms of family, I am married
with three kids.
How is the manufacturing sector
performing?
The manufacturing sector is not
growing. The last time we had double-digit growth was 2021 or
earlier than that.
Right now, we
have stagnated at 7.6 per cent. The
speculation is it might drop to six
per cent.
That means we need to do
a lot. That is one of the reasons we
are launching studies and reports like
the manufacturing priority agenda.
What needs to be done to grow the
sector?
We need predictability in the tax and
policy space. The current situation
inhibits growth directly because any
investment is done with a plan.
Any
investor has a four- or five-year plan.
What we have currently is unpredictable. The government has been
aggressive in increasing taxes, and
that really impedes manufacturing growth, something that needs
to change.
We have had cases of manufactures
closing shop and moving to other
jurisdictions. What is the exact
situation?
It is true.
We have seen big names
that have also opted to import rather than manufacture locally. Every
manufacturing company does what we call a business case.
They will
assess: if I produce this item here,
vis-à-vis importing, which one will
be more viable? When you do your
cost analysis, sometimes it is cheaper
to import certain products.
It is because certain countries have
given incentives and are encouraging
their manufacturing companies to
export. Egypt is doing that.
Kenya
needs to do that — provide incentives to allow companies to export.
In the manufacturing quarter four
barometer we did, 60 per cent of
manufacturers are holding their investments or expansion because of
the unpredictability of the policy and
tax base.
Once that is aligned, believe
you me, all these firms will invest.
Kenya is a very good environment.
We have educated citizens, our infrastructure is slightly better than
Uganda and Tanzania. Looking at
technology-wise, we are far much
ahead.
We have two ports: Mombasa
and Lamu. We have the ability to
access our region. So Kenya, indeed,
if you look at any investor, is a very
good market.
However, these issues
of taxation and the policy space are
what we really need to address. We
have to be intentional as a country.
For instance, Tanzania is listening
to every policy and proposal that
our government makes and they are luring manufacturers to invest
in their country.
We are going into the 2025-26 financial year. What is your expectation?
Predictability. If only we can fully
implement the National Tax Policy.
How can the country ensure competitiveness?
There are a number of ways, including tax applications. For instance,
there is a structure that we apply
in terms of the Common External
Tariff.
Zero for raw material, 15 per
cent for intermediate products and
25 per cent for intermediate products that are not locally available,
and then 35 per cent for finished
products.
There is a clear duty structure. We should not distort the duty
structure to favour one sector or one
company, because once you do that,
it affects your competitiveness.
Tanzania has recently imposed
some duties on Kenya’s exports.
What is your take?
Protecting local manufacturing
by increasing duty is happening
worldwide. The US is imposing tariffs on imports from China or any
other country to protect their local
companies.
But it should be done on the basis
of data and information. We must
ensure we attract investment and
make products affordable to the local citizen.
Any country can impose
tariffs, but it should be done based
on the WTO rules and guidelines.
Apart from the tax regime, what
are the other challenges in the
sector?
Cost of energy is a big one. We are
about 70 per cent uncompetitive.
Our energy is reliable but expensive.
When you do a comparison between
Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania, even as
far as South Africa, we are still very
expensive, in terms of the cost of
energy.
Our proposal to address this is to
look at the power purchase agreements and reduce the use of thermal.
Another challenge is fees, levies
and charges, especially at the county
level.
We know they need to raise
their revenue but they are not thinking about the impact of taxation to
the broader manufacturing sector.
Let it be structured. We need the
government to take critical action
in the issues around fees and charges
by counties and by ministry departments and agencies.
My expectation
is that they will hear our plea in
terms of taxes.
The issue of VAT refunds to the industry, how is the situation?
I think we need to address this as a
country because the system, the way it is structured in our country, it is
not working well.
In terms of the
study we did, there are about Sh800
billion owed to not only manufacturers but generally businesses in terms
of pending payments in government
and county government.
For the manufacturing sector,
there are VAT refund claims monthly
of more than Sh6 billion per month,
while KRA gets an allocation of
about 2.5 billion for the same. This
means we have a shortfall that needs
to be addressed.
Tell us about the priority agenda
The Manufacturing Priority Agenda focusses on four pillars. One is
global competitiveness. We are in a flat world and we compete with our
counterparts in the region, internationally and nationally.
The other second pillar of focus is
SME development. SMEs form part
of the future of the manufacturing
sector, and supporting them is crucial
for any government and that is why
we have prioritised that.
The third pillar of focus under our
Manufacturing Priority Agenda is
agriculture for industry. In many
years, that linkage between farmer
and industry has not been adequately done.
We’ve seen cases where we
are importing even tomato paste
from Egypt or any other country,
while we can farm tomatoes and process them and produce tomato paste.
Issues around pyrethrum, sun- flower for seed oil, potatoes… these
things can be done here.
So the priority is linking our farmers to the
right seeds and the right products so
that they produce the seeds and we
guarantee off-take to process and we
pay them the right amount.
Is the 20 per cent manufacturing
sector contribution to the GDP by
2030 achievable? It is a bit ambitious.
We may not reach the target
but at least we can do a double digit. It is possible. We need to change
things for us to move to that number.
We have to be intentional.
What is your dream for Kenya’s
manufacturing sector?
My dream is that the sector becomes
the leading employer in this country and a leading revenue generator
for government.
I also want to see
the sector lead in Africa for exports
to the continent and other global
markets. So I am seeing the manufacturing sector grow and have a
huge impact on the economy.
Lastly, I am also seeing a lot of youth
involvement in the manufacturing
sector because the perception that
has been created is a big man’s or
big woman’s platform.
I am seeing
a future where a lot of young people
will love manufacturing and get involved in the manufacturing sector.
That is my ambition.