New Post has been published on The Rakyat Post
New Post has been published on http://www.therakyatpost.com/business/2015/01/12/new-pride-made-haiti/
New pride with 'Made in Haiti'
The phrase is used so often it has become a cliche — Haiti is the poorest country in the Americas.
But some see potential. Haiti is a low-wage economy lying just south of the huge US market and just north of the emerging economies of Latin America, some have even spoke of its becoming a manufacturing “Taiwan of the Caribbean.”
If that sounds implausible on the anniversary of a 2009 disaster that killed more that 300,000 people, no one has told Surtab, a firm that opened in June 2013 to produce its own brand Android tablets in the capital Port-au-Prince.
The firm boasts that since opening it has expanded production to 20,000 units last year for the local, Caribbean and African markets and now provides skilled employment for 60 Haitian workers, despite the stigma of its location.
General manager Diderot Musset says Surtab hopes to triple production in 2015, but admits that even Haitians are suspicious of the firm’s claims.
“Until they get here and look at the installations, they don’t believe that we are really doing this in Haiti.
“We even had workers who would go home and say that’s what they’re doing, and people not believing them, you know: ‘You’re not making this!’
“So they had to bring a tablet home and say, ‘Okay, yeah, I made this,’ and still someone would ask, ‘Can you disassemble and reassemble it right now?'”
And it’s not just a question of perception. Haiti does present severe practical challenges for would-be entrepreneurs, especially in manufacturing – including unreliable power supply from the nation’s rickety electric grid.
Around half of the Haitian government’s income comes from foreign donors of one sort or another and the promised flood of aid in the wake of the 2010 quake never fully materialised or was used up quickly in emergency measures.
There has been a recovery, however, despite an ongoing political crisis, and President Michel Martelly’s government is bullish about economic opportunity.
The government likes to show off infrastructure projects like the new airport in Cap Haitien it hopes will attract tourists, and Haitians proudly show off local products like the Prestige beer flowing from the capital’s rebuilt brewery.
Is this enough of a basis to dream of replacing the old “poorest country” tag with a new “Taiwan of the Caribbean” cliche?
Not so fast. Low wage manufacturing jobs allow employees to drag some lucky families out of penury, but 80% of Haitians live below the poverty line and a modern mixed economy needs a finance and service sector
Robert Maguire, a former US State Department analyst at the Elliott School of International Affairs, is cautious about the Surtab example.
“I’m not sure that an economy based upon just people sitting in a factory all of the time is a real way to develop a country, absent other elements of the economy.
“It can be a part of the solution, but too often I think it’s seen as the solution.”
Surtab is proud that its performance-based salaries come out at more than one-and-a-half times Haiti’s minimum wage, but its workers grumble that it is not always a steady source of income.
“Compared between when the production line is going and when it’s not, that’s two different things,” said Farah Tilus.
“Surtab pays a base salary that’s very low — seriously low — but they offer an opportunity that we can… make the most of.”
Nevertheless, after all the country has been through, there is a certain pride that comes from seeing each tablet bearing the stamp “Made in Haiti.”