Industry and Trade Minister Abdallah Kigoda has cautioned Tabora regional authorities to handle prospective investors with care and work out measures to stem corruption and red tape that scare off potential investors into the region.

The Minister for Trade and Industries, Dr Abdallah Kigoda
“Investors hate excessive bureaucracy  and time wasting practices because, to them, time is money,” Dr Kigoda  said while closing Tabora Regional Investment Forum in Dar es Salaam last weekend.
He commended the region for identifying  potential investment opportunities, challenging the regional leaders to  walk the government talk by reducing the cost of doing business and  putting in place favourable investment climate.
Tanzania  Leaf Tobacco Company’s (TLTC) Group Director of Legal and Corporate  Affairs Richard Sinamtwa, in a paper he presented to the forum, said  Tabora Region has about 45,000 farmers who produce over 60 million  kilogrammes of tobacco annually for processing and value-addition  domestically before exporting.
Besides tobacco, which is the region’s  economic backbone, Tabora residents produce beans and peas, maize,  cassava, potatoes, groundnuts, sesame seed, sunflower, rice, mangoes and  honey.
“There is huge potential for investment  in agro-processing,” said Mr Sinamtwa, decrying lack of value chain to  support investments as the region’s serious challenge. Mr Sinamtwa whose  company has invested heavily in the region mentioned strong  agricultural production, well educated labour force, rich rural areas  and high household incomes among the region’s investment strengths.
Tanzania Private Sector Foundation  Executive Director Godfrey Simbeye said promotion of conducive  investment environment was inevitable to achieve the country’s five-year  development plan that targets a 10-per cent growth rate by 2015/16.
He commended the government’s initiative  of Big Results Now, saying it was the right decision towards changing  the culture of doing things, particularly on how the public servants  interact with the private sector.
Dar es Salaam Stock Exchange Executive  Director Moremi Marwa advised small, medium and large business  enterprises to use the stock market to raise capital, saying the bourse  offers better terms for business financing to both capital issuers and  consumers.
“Even Municipalities can use the DSE to  raise funds for development of social and physical infrastructure like  roads, schools, markets, storage facilities and health centres,” said Mr  Marwa.






 
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