BY ANDREW CARUSO, DANIELLE NESMITH, TERESA PETERBURS, AND EGLE VILKELYTE


Andrew CarusoDanielle NesmithTeresa Peterburs, and Egle Vilkelyte are second-year MA students who recently evaluated a Chinese investment project in Igbesa, Nigeria as part of the International Development Practicum.


“When we ask locals where China is, they point down the road to the zone,” said John Xue, Chief Operating Officer for the Ogun-Guangdong Free Trade Zone in Igbesa, Nigeria. China’s presence in Africa is growing through a number of vehicles, not the least of which are sizeable investments in Special Economic Zones (SEZs) across the continent. The use of SEZs as conduits for global economic integration and growth is familiar for China, who has witnessed the transformative impact of SEZs on its own economy for several decades. The application of the SEZ strategy to the African context, however, has produced mixed results by most accounts. As part of the International Development Practicum program, an intrepid team of SAIS students spent two weeks inside the Ogun-Guangdong Free Trade Zone (OGFTZ) to understand the political, social and economic implications of the China-Africa SEZ strategy.

The Ogun-Guangdong Free Trade Zone partnership began in the mid-2000s between China’s Guangdong province and Nigeria’s Ogun state government. Located roughly 30 kilometers out side of Lagos, the OGFTZ was positioned to take advantage of one of Africa’s largest and fastest growing economies. Yet performance of the OGFTZ in its early years was disappointing and hampered by a number of infrastructure and management challenges, and through a series of transitions, a new management team took control of operations in 2012. Now, as the zone’s majority owner and operator, the privately-owned Zhongfu Management Company represents a shift in Chinese investment patterns in Africa away from state-owned-enterprises and toward private industry. The novelty of the zone’s management model is further underscored by its recent performance – the OGFTZ has rebounded from a potential shut-down to its current position as one of the country’s most successful zones. One customs official indicated that customs duties have increased nearly a thousandfold since the time of management transition from 500,000 NGN in annual customs duties to over 500 million NGN.

What impact has this new management model had in shifting the trajectory of the OGFTZ? Is the dramatic change in the zone’s recent growth a good thing? For whom?  SAIS IDEV students, Andrew Caruso, Danielle Nesmith, Teresa Peterburs, and Egle Vilkelyte, were invited to spend two weeks in Igbesa, Nigeria to meet with a broad collection of the zone’s stakeholders, assess its current state, and provide insights into the zone’s future sustainable growth.

Guided by current literature on economic, social and political factors that impact the success of special economic zones, the team created an interview agenda that represented a holistic cross-section of zone participants. The team conducted in-depth interviews with zone management, investors of various types/sizes/longevities in the zone, Ogun state government officials, educational institutions, local chiefs, workers and prospective investors. Among a rich array of findings, common themes emerged. Most notably, there was significant consensus that the zone’s new management team was essential to the zone’s recent success through primarily two channels: their innovative and creative approaches to problem-solving in the African context, and their focus on building and maintaining relationships at every level (including attracting future investment through a strong network of business colleagues in China).

While a general sense of positive progress was noted across the stakeholder group, challenges certainly remain. Among the top obstacles cited by stakeholders, improving infrastructure and managing cross-cultural dynamics remain key impediments to future progress. Without fail, each stakeholder (including state officials) noted the condition of the zone’s single access road as its biggest handicap. According to a local chief, the road has not been paved since the 1960s, when it was originally designed for passenger vehicles, not the heavy industrial truck traffic it currently supports. Affectionately named “Massage Road” by the Chinese management team, the road remains unpaved, with deep holes and gulleys that can overturn trailers, cause damage to shipped products, and reduce the number of trucks that can enter or exit the zone with inputs or outputs. At least one investor indicated the need to warehouse nearly two months of previous production simply because they could not acquire the number of trucks required to bring their products to market.

Similarly, the reliability of the zone’s energy infrastructure remains tenuous, since the country’s main natural gas producer, who also built the gas distribution grid for the zone, has now indicated that supplying additional gas to meet power demand (let alone growth) is not possible. Current supply is also sub-optimal; tenants face significant variability in the power supply’s consistency and reliability, causing production delays, damage to equipment, and the need to maintain back-up generators. Expanding the traditional role of a zone operator, Zhongfu now finds itself as the lead negotiator for constructing multi-party agreements to address some of these needs on behalf of their investors.

Yet, building physical infrastructure is not the only priority on investors’ minds. Social infrastructure has a profound impact on the bottom line as well. Linguistic and cultural differences between Chinese companies, Nigerian workers (including ethnic differences) and other nationalities represented among the SEZ investors were consistently cited among the top challenges that threaten short-term productivity and long-term sustainability. Engaging with the local culture while simultaneously preparing Nigerian workers for success in culturally-foreign companies is an oft-cited yet under-achieved goal across the zone. Identifying methods and partnerships to enhance understanding, cooperation and mutual respect in order to build cross-cultural fluency will be crucial for the zone’s long-term sustainability in the Nigerian context.

Despite these challenges, each day on the zone is characterized by a flurry of activity, construction of new assets, and the promise of the future. In fact, the SAIS IDEV team was lucky to arrive on the eve of a delegation visit by key hi-tech investors from China. The team spent a number of days traveling and meeting with the delegation as they considered a $1billion investment to create a hi-tech park within the zone – a partnership that would nearly triple the size of the zone’s current investments. How the zone is prepared to respond to the demands of this investment on its physical, environmental and social infrastructure remains unclear. There is reason to be optimistic, however, that the current success of the zone, its positive and deepening relationships with local structures, and its innovative approach to problem solving will result in solutions that favor long-term growth over “fast money.” It’s in this way that the OGFTZ can continue to be a catalyst for sustainable development in Nigeria - or in local parlance, “small-small change.”

Photo Credit: "Entry Gate, Ogun-Guangdong Free Trade Zone" by Danielle Nesmith.

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