At a
factory in Casablanca this month, executives and officials gathered at a launch
ceremony for a new car model. It was a small but significant step, Moroccan
officials hope, in the country's emergence as an auto producer for the region.
The factory is operated
by Somaca, a venture which is majorly owned by the Moroccan arm of French car
maker Renault. Somaca produced 60,000 cars in 2012 under the Renault and Dacia
brand names.
Now it is making a new
version of the Sandero, a small, low-cost sedan from Dacia, the Romanian unit
of Renault.
"All the process
that you see comes from the Romanian plant. We have just copied it, and it
works perfectly," Fabrice Delecroix, Somaca's managing director, told
Reuters.
Somaca is part of an
expanding web of car makers and parts suppliers in Morocco, a heavily
agricultural country which hopes to use the auto sector to expand its
industrial base.
A strong auto industry,
exporting cars to Europe, North Africa and further afield, could help to
resolve one of the country's main economic weaknesses, its external deficits.
Morocco posted a trade deficit of $5.3 billion in the first three months of
2013, and last year obtained a $6.2 billion precautionary credit line from the
International Monetary Fund in case of further pressure on its foreign
reserves.
The auto industry may
also become important to Morocco's political stability by reducing
unemployment, which is officially estimated near 10 percent and is believed to
be much higher for young people.
Currently, agriculture -
some of it in the form of rudimentary and subsistence farming, and highly
vulnerable to the vagaries of rainfall - employs about 40 percent of the
workforce of over 11 million people.
"Morocco has a
chance to become a big player in the auto industry," said Najib Akesbi, an
economist at the Hassan II Institute of Agronomy and Veterinary Science in
Rabat, though he added that the country would need to develop a better
qualified workforce.
TANGIER PLANT
Morocco at present has
only two factories making fully assembled cars: the Somaca facility and a plant
opened by Renault near the northern port city of Tangier in February last year.
The country's total car production last year was about 120,000 cars, with
roughly 90,000 of them exported, mainly to Europe and Arab nations.
Renault's Tangier car
factory, the biggest in North Africa, required initial investment of 600
million euros ($785 million) and is expected to reach an annual production
capacity of 400,000 vehicles in coming years.
"The capacity of the
Tangier plant will double in 2013 and 95 percent of its production is to be
exported," the head of Renault's Moroccan operations, Jacques Prost, told
Reuters.
Many of the benefits to
the wider Moroccan economy come in the form of parts orders from Renault to
local companies; Prost said some 42 percent of the content of Renault's
Moroccan cars came from local suppliers.
Renault claims a 37
percent market share within Morocco, selling 47,700 new cars in 2012 including
24,042 under the Dacia brand. Peugeot and Ford also have major presences in the
market.
Morocco has several
advantages in attracting auto sector investment. Workers' salaries are about a
quarter of the French minimum wage; the average monthly pre-tax wage in Morocco
is around $550.
Meanwhile, car exports
from Morocco benefit from several free trade agreements signed by the
government, mainly with the European Union and with Jordan, Egypt and Tunisia.
A manufacturing presence
in Morocco can also be helpful to car makers facing down union pressures
elsewhere in the world. Last week, Dacia threatened to shift some of its
production from Romania to Morocco after workers in Romania downed tools for
two days in pursuit of a 40 percent pay increase.
"If this protest
will not end up reasonably and in a mutually beneficial manner and if employees
will continue with unrealistic demands, there's a greater probability to transfer
an important part of production to Morocco," Dacia vice-president
Constantin Stroe said.
INCENTIVES
Despite strained state
finances, the Moroccan government is offering a range of monetary incentives to
foreign investors in the auto industry. Trade minister Abdelkader Amara has
said talks are at an advanced stage on possible investments by other foreign
firms including India's Tata Motors .
He told Reuters last week
that he was still waiting for news from the companies. "It's a tough task
to attract such investments, but we have taken the necessary steps to convince
them," he said.
Morocco faces obstacles,
however. One is a shortage of qualified technicians and engineers; the
government is trying to overcome that by building training institutes and allowing
foreign investors to run them.
At an institute run by
Renault, the company teaches students how to perform tasks necessary for its
entire assembly line, Prost said.
Morocco also faces actual
or potential competition from other relatively low-cost countries which may
have better-skilled labour, such as Turkey, Egypt and Algeria. Last year
Renault said it would build a car factory in Algeria, resuming production there
after an absence of more than four decades.
The Algerian plant is to
begin operating in 2014 with initial annual production of about 25,000 cars,
which would be sold in the local market. Production there could grow to 75,000
cars depending on demand.
A third problem is the
political unrest which continues across much of the Middle East since the Arab
Spring uprisings of 2011. The unrest has hurt some important markets such as
Egypt and slowed growth elsewhere in the region, Renault's Prost said - for now
at least, weakening Morocco's position as a car exporting platform.
"In Egypt, we have a
good importer and he does everything to boost sales, but the demand isn't
there," Prost said.
(Reuters)
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