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Cotton textile industry in Zambia: The economic viability of revamping Mulungushi Textiles Limited

The agriculture and manufacturing sectors have been identified and prioritized by the Zambian government as sectors that could contribute significantly to poverty reduction through industrialization and creation of employment. The cotton textile industry is one such industry that cuts across the two...

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Main Author: Munoni, Chiluba Mercy
Other Authors: Hirsch, Alan
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Graduate School of Development Policy and Practice 2017
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access_status_str Open Access
author Munoni, Chiluba Mercy
author2 Hirsch, Alan
author_browse Hirsch, Alan
Munoni, Chiluba Mercy
author_facet Hirsch, Alan
Munoni, Chiluba Mercy
author_sort Munoni, Chiluba Mercy
collection Thesis
description The agriculture and manufacturing sectors have been identified and prioritized by the Zambian government as sectors that could contribute significantly to poverty reduction through industrialization and creation of employment. The cotton textile industry is one such industry that cuts across the two sectors. This research paper focuses on the cotton textile industry in Zambia, with specific emphasis on Mulungushi Textiles Limited that was reopened by the Republican President, His Excellency, Mr. Edgar Chagwa Lungu in August 2016 after having been closed for about a decade. To this end, the main objective of the research paper is to analyze the economic viability of revamping Mulungushi Textiles Limited by focusing on determinants of viability which included; production cost, government policies and strategies, and institutional arrangements, among others. The study analyzes mainly qualitatively both primary and secondary data. Primary data was principally sourced through interviews and observations, while secondary data was through online and physical sources such as books, reports and other written publications. From the research findings, Mulungushi Textiles Limited factory machinery is obsolete and dilapidated to fully operationalize the business strategic units of ginning, spinning, weaving, dyeing and printing, garment production and cooking oil processing. The study recommends that the factory should undergo a complete overhaul in the long run and in the short run, resume garment production which was identified to be a low hanging fruit. The study concludes that, with the right investment, policies, strategies and concerted efforts from both the public and private sectors, revamping Mulungushi Textiles Limited is economically viable and has great potential to contribute to the government's efforts in promoting inclusive growth through poverty reduction, particularly in rural areas where poverty is mostly prevalent.
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language eng
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license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2017
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/25081 Cotton textile industry in Zambia: The economic viability of revamping Mulungushi Textiles Limited Munoni, Chiluba Mercy Hirsch, Alan Development Policy and Practice The agriculture and manufacturing sectors have been identified and prioritized by the Zambian government as sectors that could contribute significantly to poverty reduction through industrialization and creation of employment. The cotton textile industry is one such industry that cuts across the two sectors. This research paper focuses on the cotton textile industry in Zambia, with specific emphasis on Mulungushi Textiles Limited that was reopened by the Republican President, His Excellency, Mr. Edgar Chagwa Lungu in August 2016 after having been closed for about a decade. To this end, the main objective of the research paper is to analyze the economic viability of revamping Mulungushi Textiles Limited by focusing on determinants of viability which included; production cost, government policies and strategies, and institutional arrangements, among others. The study analyzes mainly qualitatively both primary and secondary data. Primary data was principally sourced through interviews and observations, while secondary data was through online and physical sources such as books, reports and other written publications. From the research findings, Mulungushi Textiles Limited factory machinery is obsolete and dilapidated to fully operationalize the business strategic units of ginning, spinning, weaving, dyeing and printing, garment production and cooking oil processing. The study recommends that the factory should undergo a complete overhaul in the long run and in the short run, resume garment production which was identified to be a low hanging fruit. The study concludes that, with the right investment, policies, strategies and concerted efforts from both the public and private sectors, revamping Mulungushi Textiles Limited is economically viable and has great potential to contribute to the government's efforts in promoting inclusive growth through poverty reduction, particularly in rural areas where poverty is mostly prevalent. 2017-09-06T07:10:15Z 2017-09-06T07:10:15Z 2017 Master Thesis Masters MPhil http://hdl.handle.net/11427/25081 eng application/pdf Graduate School of Development Policy and Practice Faculty of Commerce University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Development Policy and Practice
Munoni, Chiluba Mercy
Cotton textile industry in Zambia: The economic viability of revamping Mulungushi Textiles Limited
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Cotton textile industry in Zambia: The economic viability of revamping Mulungushi Textiles Limited
title_full Cotton textile industry in Zambia: The economic viability of revamping Mulungushi Textiles Limited
title_fullStr Cotton textile industry in Zambia: The economic viability of revamping Mulungushi Textiles Limited
title_full_unstemmed Cotton textile industry in Zambia: The economic viability of revamping Mulungushi Textiles Limited
title_short Cotton textile industry in Zambia: The economic viability of revamping Mulungushi Textiles Limited
title_sort cotton textile industry in zambia the economic viability of revamping mulungushi textiles limited
topic Development Policy and Practice
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/25081
work_keys_str_mv AT munonichilubamercy cottontextileindustryinzambiatheeconomicviabilityofrevampingmulungushitextileslimited