Uganda Development Corporation Explained

Agency Name:Uganda Development Corporation
Nativename:UDC
Jurisdiction:Government of Uganda
Headquarters:Kampala, Uganda
Chief1 Name:Chairman
Chief1 Position:
Ham Mugenyi[1]
Chief2 Name:Executive Director
Chief2 Position:
Patrick Bitonder Birungi[2]
Parent Agency:Uganda Ministry of Trade, Industry & Cooperatives
Website:Homepage

The Uganda Development Corporation (UDC) is an agency of the government of Uganda. It promotes and facilitates the industrial and economic development of Uganda.[3] Formed in 1952, it had some success in promoting local industrial development and was swelled with the addition of newly nationalised industries in the early 1970s. These, however, proved too much for the corporation, and it went into a slow decline before being completely phased out in 1998. The organisation was reconstituted with similar aims in 2008.[4]

History

Before Amin (1952 - 1971)

The UDC was created by the British colonial administration in 1952 to "facilitate the industrial and economic development of Uganda". Under the Uganda Development Corporation Act 1952, the objective of UDC was to "promote and assist in the financing, management or establishment of— new undertakings; schemes for the better organisation and modernisation of and the more efficient carrying out of any undertaking; and the conduct of research into the industrial and mineral potentialities of Uganda."[5] It was given a starting equity of £5 million, which it quickly grew.[6] According to Roger Falk , a UK management consultant, as a development corporation, the Uganda Development Corporation was the best of its kind in the world

At the time of Ugandan independence in 1962, a report commissioned by the outgoing British administration and incoming government and overseen by the World Bank commented that "the UDC has energetically explored a wide range of industrial possibilities" among a backdrop of economic pessimism over coffee prices, which Uganda was (and remains) heavily reliant on.[7] By this time, the UDC was already one of the two largest public corporations of the government, a "principal instrument in the country's development program." The same report was complimentary of the UDC's performance, describing it as "presently the most important entrepreneur in Uganda and a successful one in this most difficult field of fostering development."[7] By 1965, it had turned a post-tax profit every year since its creation (albeit with some help from tariff protection) and employed (including subsidiaries) over 18,000 people, engaged in projects as diverse as cement and cotton.[6] State control of the economy was on the increase. The UDC, which had previously provided startup equity before selling out to private investors, was now given the legal right to retain majority shareholding in companies it had been instrumental in setting up, and with the 1970 Nakivubo Pronouncement, which allowed for stakes up to 60 percent.[8]

Under Amin (1971 - as above1979)

After new President Idi Amin presided over the expulsion of Asians from Uganda in 1972, the UDC gained control over some of the largest enterprises previously controlled by those expelled, to which it added some 90 nationalised British holdings in the country later in the same year. Acquisitions from the Asians included much of the profitable Madhvani and Mehta Groups (with the exception of the sugar industry), and from the British a diverse portfolio including tea plantations, a printing firm, a cigarette factory, and a hoe factory.[9]

Together, these gains should have provided it with a possible turnover of $100 million and doubled its assets. Both the rapid nature of the growth and the sudden lack of experienced technicians and managers, however, proved a challenge for the corporation.[9] Uganda's industrial development strategy had been unsuccessful in promoting human resource development as the 1962 report had suggested, and local entrepreneurial capabilities "were not promoted and nurtured". Technological capabilities were also lacking.[10] Indeed, by late 1973 such was the lack in management capability that the UDC was unable to obtain financial reports from 14 of its 52 subsidiaries, and there were tensions in the boardroom.[9] The Nakivubo Pronouncement was revoked and in some industries the UDC was instructed to refrain from owning controlling stakes.[8]

The UDC started to decline. It had over-extended its capacity and could not effectively control the many industries in which it now owned stakes. Because of this, the public sector was re-organised again in 1974 creating nine holding companies, further weakening the UDC - some of its original profitable industries were removed, leaving it with the same liabilities but fewer assets. By the second half of the 1970s, with all viable manufacturing units reallocated, the UDC was reduced to a skeleton staff based in its headquarters.[11]

After Amin (1979 - present)

Faced with mounting economic strife, in 1982 the incoming Obote administration opted to liberalise the economy, returning some government-owned companies to former owners, including the Asian conglomerates.[12] Some other nationalised companies, split from the UDC in 1974, were returned to it in a futile attempt to spur innovation.[11]

Restructuring

By the time the law that re-created UDC wound its way through Uganda's parliament in 2015, only one legacy asset remained, Lake Katwe Salt Works, in Kasese District.[4]

New investments, focusing on public-private-partnerships, include the Kalangala Infrastructure Development Project, which is a joint venture between UDC, IDC of South Africa and InfraCo Holdings, of the United Kingdom.[4] The US$50 million investment, includes a solar/thermal hybrid power station, procurement of two surface-vessel water transport crafts to connect the island with the mainland, electrifying Bugala Island, the largest in the Ssese Islands Archipelago, developing a water supply system on the island and developing a 66km (41miles), gravel road network on the island.[13]

Other new projects under UDC include the Kiira Motors Corporation, Soroti Fruit Processing Factory and the new start-up; Uganda National Airlines Company. UDC also owns a 32 percent stake in Atiak Sugar Factory.[4] [14]

Future projects include (a) Moroto Ateker Cement Company Limited, (b) Lake Victoria Glass Works Limited and Isingiro Fruit Factory.[14] In April 2019, president Yoweri Museveni launched commercial production at Soroti Fruit Processing Factory, a US$13.4 million investment 80 percent owned by UDC.[15]

Investment portfolio

The operational investments as of August 2020, are listed in the table below:[16]

No.!!Investment!!UDC Ownership!!Partner!!Partner Ownership
1Soroti Fruit Processing Factory80% Teso Tropical Fruit Growers Cooperative Union 20%
240% 60%
3Kalangala Infrastructure Services Limited 45.7% InfraCo Holdings 54.3%
4Kigezi Highland Tea Company Lease Financing  

Governance

As of November 2021, the following individuals constituted the board of directors of UDC.[17]

  1. Godfrey R. Ruhurira: Chairman
  2. Geraldine Ssali Busuulwa
  3. Francis Ogwang
  4. Edward Nyatia
  5. Barbara Mulwana
  6. Dorothy Masifa Ochela
  7. Patrick Birungi: Executive Director
  8. To be named: Representative of Ministry of Finance.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Museveni Launches Soroti Fruit Factory . ChimpReports Uganda . 13 April 2019 . 14 April 2019 . George Asiimwe . Kampala.
  2. Web site: Uganda Development Corporation gets new boss . . 4 April 2019 . 4 April 2019 . Ismail Musa Ladu . Kampala.
  3. Web site: Kampala . Uganda Development Corporation: About Us . 3 July 2013 . 17 August 2016 . Uganda Development Corporation (UDC) . UDC.
  4. Web site: 13 October 2015 . Interview with Fred Ogene, CEO of Uganda Development Corporation . The Report Company . Thereport.com. London . 26 June 2018.
  5. Web site: Kampala . 1952 . ULII . Uganda Development Corporation Act 1952 . Uganda Legal Information Institute (ULII) . 1 October 2016.
  6. Book: Gann . Lewis H. . Duignan . Peter . Colonialism in Africa, 1870-1960 . 13 August 2010 . 1975 . CUP Archive . 978-0-521-08641-7 . 477–8.
  7. Web site: pdf . Davis . H. David . 1962 . 13 August 2010 . The economic development of Uganda . World Bank.
  8. Web site: Determinants of FDI and their impact on economic growth in Uganda . Marios B. . Obwona . Economic Policy Research Centre . 1996 . 13 August 2010 . 5.
  9. Book: Jørgensen, Jan Jelmert . Uganda: a modern history . 12 August 2010 . 288–290 . 1981 . Taylor & Francis . 978-0-85664-643-0.
  10. Web site: 13 August 2010 . 2007 . PDF . Integrated Industrial Policy for Sustainable Industrial Development and Competitiveness (Part I) . Ugandan Ministry of Tourism, Trade and Industry / UN Industrial Development Organisation . 4.
  11. Web site: Uganda has a second chance to industrialise . 18 December 2008 . 13 August 2010 . . Juma A. . Okuku . Kampala.
  12. Web site: Balunywa . W. . A Critical Review of the Privatisation Process in Uganda, 1989-1999 . August 2000 . 13 August 2010 . . 5–7 . PDF.
  13. Web site: 12 February 2013 . US$50 Million Kalangala Project Kicks Off . Kitatta Kaaya . Sadaab . 26 June 2018 . . Kampala.
  14. Web site: 4 April 2019 . 26 June 2018 . Economists to Government: Fund Businesses for Long-Term . . Martin Luther Oketch . and Rainher Ojon . Kampala.
  15. Web site: 4 January 2019 . Uganda to commission US$13.4 million mango and orange fruit factory . Foodbusinessafrica.com . Food Business Africa . 14 April 2019 . Nairobi.
  16. Web site: Uganda Development Corporation . Uganda Development Corporation Investment Portfolio . 5 August 2020 . Uganda Development Corporation . 5 August 2020 . Kampala.
  17. Web site: Cabinet Approves 8 Members to Uganda Development Corporation Board . 23 November 2021 . The Kampala Post . 24 November 2021 . Nicholas Agaba . Kampala, Uganda.