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Dairy Milk, the woes of Ugandan exporters


Uganda is a naturally gifted agricultural country. When you see the volumes of production under the largely subsistence approach that characterises our agriculture, the potential is immense. One sector whose potential has been proven is the Dairy Sector.

Milk production in the country experienced a nose dive in the 1970s all the way through the 80s. We relied alot on imports especially of milk products like powder milk, cheese among others. The Dairy Corporation used to collect and process 20 million litres of milk per annum in 1972 but this dropped to an all time low of less than half a million litres in 1983.

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Fresh Milk collection by Dairy Corporation 1980 – 1991 (‘000 litres) – Source EPRC

When the Government came up with the Diary Master Plan of 1993, it was a key turning point closely followed by the enactment of the Dairy Industry Act, 1998. As a result of these interventions, the industry monopoly enjoyed by the Dairy Corporation was removed, allowing other private players to venture into processing.

The Dairy market in Uganda is dominated by small scale dairy farmers who contribute 80% to the overall milk production in the nation followed by 20.0% from the large scale dairy farms. Their production is mainly based on low input traditional pasture production systems making the country one of the few low cost producers in the world.

Liberalisation of the sector has seen annual production grow from 9.3 million litres in 1990 to 2.5 Billion in 2019. Production growth is estimated at 18% per annum. This shows the high prospects the sector holds.

Some of the players include; Brookside Dairy, Jesa Farm Dairy, Pearl Dairy Farms, Amos Dairies and GBK Dairies. Due to local market limitations, they have ventured into the export market with Kenya being the leading destination. A move that seems to have disrupted the dairy industry in that country.

According to the Dairy Development Authority (DDA),exports stood at US $ 60 million in 2016 and increased to approximately USD 130 million in 2017/18, a figure expected to hit USD 500 million in a few years from now if trade conditions stabilise. The increase in the net exports has been as a result of increased compliance and meeting standards of Uganda’s milk and milk products on both regional and international markets due to efforts by DDA in regulation and quality assurance. Dairy exports mainly go to EAC, COMESA countries and SADC SADC, UAE, Nigeria, Syria, Egypt, Omen, USA, Nepal & Bangladesh. The exported dairy products include; UHT milk, ghee, casein, whey proteins, and butter oil among others

The East African community was founded to among others foster a large regional market for goods and services through free trade. However, over the years, trade conflicts have cropped up between some member states. In 2019, Kenyan Egg traders came out in arms over the cheap imported Ugandan eggs and wanted a ban placed on their importation but the government refused to cave in to the demand.

Following the assault of dairy products from Uganda on the Kenyan market, tensions begun simmering as the local dairy sector struggled. This culminated in the slapping of a 16% Value Added Tax on Milk imports from Uganda.

Rwanda had already stopped milk imports from Uganda heavily impacting some companies like Pearl Dairy Farms whose Lato Milk product was on demand.

Having nurtured the Dairy Sector from insignificance to the current successes it is enjoying, it would be foolhardy for the Government of Uganda to simply let it struggle through these challenging waters without intervening. Access to a large regional market is an attribute used to lure investors. With an annual production potential of 10 Billion litres of milk the sector is set for further growth. These non tariff barriers are likely to prevent further investment and kill budding businesses that could have used the EAC market to become significant global industry players.

The onus therefore is with the regional governments to come together and address this and other trade issues being affected by Non Tariff barriers.

James Wire

Small Business Consultant

@wirejames on Twitter

Cryptocurrency – Should Government monitor stupidity?


I have been following reports about an alleged cryptocurrency scam that has been going on and has left many in tears after losing unmentionable sums of money. Listening to pundits on radio interchangebly calling the scam bitcoin and blockchain was the lowest moment for me because it showed a total failure to understand what cryptocurrencies (cryptos) are.

The scam promised depositors a 40% return on their money monthly hence attracting many fly by night, get rich quick addicts. They borrowed money, invested their savings, gathered their relatives to co-invest, sounds familiar? They were being sold tales of how the money is invested in cryptos and multiplies very fast as a result.

A Cyptocurrency is a digital currency that uses cryptography for security (like the water marks you see on paper money) thus making it difficult to counterfeit. Examples incude Bitcoin, Litecoin, Ripple, Stellar among others.

Cryptocurrencies enable normal execution of financial transactions online. One can buy or sell using Bitcoin for as ong as the other party can transact using the same medium. Microsoft, AT&T, Expedia, Norwegian Air and Travala are some of the globally known brands that accept Bitcoin transactions.

Lack of regulation aside, cryprocurrencies are looked at as the future of currency.  Being a new concept, the scammers are always awake to exploit the ignorance of the masses. The scams are no different from the Black Dollars con where one is given a box full of dollar size papers and some liquid with the promise that you can print your own dollars at will.

Some indicators of scams are;

  • The lure for high returns amidst minimal risk on the investment. Imagine the promise that these Ugandans got of 40% returns monthy. Which business can guarantee this? Maybe selling cocaine or heroin.
  • Being pushed to urgently make a decision after a pitch. The agents are designed to make the sale in a manner that doesn’t give you time to have a second thought.
  • Information expecially online is usually not easy to come by but in cases where you find it, not much can be deciphered. I saw this with One Coin when it was initially marketed to me.
  • If it is too good to be true
  • When you do not understand the actual business and how it brings in the money.

Media pundits have blamed the Government for not regulating the Cryptocurrencies. They forget that the growth of technology is much faster than governments can keep pace. Imagine Mobile Money which has been a part of our economy for over a decade still has not got the full regulatory mechanism in place. We only hope to see that happen probably next year. How about cryptos which are not only new age but ever changing in design?

One would think that the gullible victims are the poor unemployed Ugandans looking for a way to make a quick buck but that doesnt explain the presence on the list of some top military officials who put in millions as well as a good number of corporate employees.

So, other than blame cryptocurrencies for what is going on, we should be focusing on the scams and the perpetrators who try to hide under the noble innovation of Cryptos and Blockchain. The funny thing is that the victims are now looking for the next scam to join.

Nothing substitutes eaarning through legitimate hardwork especially if your goal is lasting wealth.

James Wire is a Business & Technology Consultant based in Kampala

Twitter – @wirejames

Email – lunghabo [at] gmail [dot] com