{"id":43092,"date":"2026-07-06T16:52:55","date_gmt":"2026-07-06T13:52:55","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/ugmirror.com\/?p=43092"},"modified":"2026-07-06T16:53:01","modified_gmt":"2026-07-06T13:53:01","slug":"the-test-uganda-hasnt-sat-yet","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/ugmirror.com\/index.php\/2026\/07\/06\/the-test-uganda-hasnt-sat-yet\/","title":{"rendered":"The Test Uganda Hasn&#8217;t Sat Yet"},"content":{"rendered":"\n<h5 class=\"wp-block-heading\"><strong>By Richard Rays Kyorakunde<\/strong><\/h5>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">Global capital is being redirected. Supply chains once anchored in China are dispersing toward Vietnam, Bangladesh, India and parts of Africa; sovereign wealth funds from the Gulf are diversifying into ports, logistics&nbsp;and&nbsp;food&nbsp;systems&nbsp;across&nbsp;the&nbsp;continent;&nbsp;multilateral&nbsp;lenders&nbsp;are&nbsp;recalibrating&nbsp;toward&nbsp;economies&nbsp;that can absorb capital productively. Uganda sits inside this reallocation, and by the headline numbers, it is participating&nbsp;meaningfully.&nbsp;Foreign&nbsp;direct&nbsp;investment&nbsp;reached&nbsp;a&nbsp;record&nbsp;$3.3\u20133.4&nbsp;billion&nbsp;in&nbsp;2024,&nbsp;and&nbsp;coffee export&nbsp;earnings&nbsp;roughly&nbsp;doubled&nbsp;to&nbsp;$2.2\u20132.4&nbsp;billion&nbsp;in&nbsp;the&nbsp;2024\/25&nbsp;season.&nbsp;These&nbsp;are&nbsp;genuine&nbsp;achievements, not statistical artefacts. The&nbsp;question worth asking&nbsp;is not whether Uganda is attracting&nbsp;capital \u2014 it plainly is \u2014 but whether the country&#8217;s industrial policy architecture, much of which already exists on paper, will be enforced&nbsp;with enough discipline once&nbsp;the fiscal&nbsp;space&nbsp;to&nbsp;test&nbsp;it&nbsp;arrives.&nbsp;That is&nbsp;a narrower question than the&nbsp;one&nbsp;usually&nbsp;posed&nbsp;in&nbsp;investment&nbsp;forums,&nbsp;and&nbsp;a&nbsp;fairer&nbsp;one&nbsp;than&nbsp;the&nbsp;one&nbsp;usually&nbsp;posed&nbsp;by&nbsp;Uganda&#8217;s&nbsp;critics.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<h5 class=\"wp-block-heading\"><strong>Before<\/strong><strong>&nbsp;<\/strong><strong>First<\/strong><strong>&nbsp;<\/strong><strong>Oil,<\/strong><strong>&nbsp;<\/strong><strong>Judge<\/strong><strong>&nbsp;<\/strong><strong>the<\/strong><strong>&nbsp;<\/strong><strong>Foundation,<\/strong><strong>&nbsp;<\/strong><strong>Not<\/strong><strong>&nbsp;<\/strong><strong>the<\/strong><strong>&nbsp;<\/strong><strong>Building<\/strong><strong><\/strong><\/h5>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">Uganda&nbsp;has&nbsp;not&nbsp;yet&nbsp;produced&nbsp;a&nbsp;barrel&nbsp;of&nbsp;commercial&nbsp;oil.&nbsp;The&nbsp;Lake&nbsp;Albert&nbsp;development&nbsp;and&nbsp;the&nbsp;East&nbsp;African Crude Oil Pipeline represent the capital-formation phase of a resource economy \u2014 pipeline construction, upstream&nbsp;investment,&nbsp;logistics build-out \u2014 not its&nbsp;output phase.&nbsp;This matters for how the FDI&nbsp;data&nbsp;should be read. Uganda&#8217;s FDI stock has grown from roughly $14 billion in 2019 to over $20 billion by 2024, but the composition is concentrated: oil and gas-linked investment dominates recent inflow growth, and the Netherlands alone accounted for close to 59 percent of 2024 inflows, with France a distant second. This concentration is a legitimate concern, and it should not be waved away as a temporary phase \u2014 resource-dependent&nbsp;FDI&nbsp;structures&nbsp;have&nbsp;a&nbsp;documented&nbsp;tendency&nbsp;to&nbsp;persist&nbsp;well&nbsp;past&nbsp;the&nbsp;point&nbsp;at&nbsp;which&nbsp;diversification should have begun. But it is also true that comparing this construction-phase composition to Vietnam&#8217;s decades-old,&nbsp;mature&nbsp;manufacturing&nbsp;export&nbsp;base&nbsp;compares&nbsp;two&nbsp;different&nbsp;stages&nbsp;of&nbsp;economic&nbsp;development&nbsp;as though they&nbsp;were&nbsp;contemporaneous.&nbsp;The honest position holds both&nbsp;facts at once:&nbsp;the concentration&nbsp;is&nbsp;real and worth tracking closely, and the sequencing argument is also real and should temper how quickly conclusions are drawn from it.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<h5 class=\"wp-block-heading\"><strong>Uganda&#8217;s<\/strong><strong>&nbsp;<\/strong><strong>Economy<\/strong><strong>&nbsp;<\/strong><strong>Is<\/strong><strong>&nbsp;<\/strong><strong>Growing.<\/strong><strong>&nbsp;<\/strong><strong>Its<\/strong><strong>&nbsp;<\/strong><strong>Factories Aren&#8217;t<\/strong><strong>&nbsp;<\/strong><strong>Gaining<\/strong><strong>&nbsp;<\/strong><strong>Ground.<\/strong><strong><\/strong><\/h5>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">Manufacturing&nbsp;value&nbsp;added&nbsp;has&nbsp;held&nbsp;near&nbsp;15&nbsp;percent&nbsp;of&nbsp;GDP&nbsp;for&nbsp;several&nbsp;years \u2014&nbsp;a&nbsp;share&nbsp;that,&nbsp;taken&nbsp;alone, invites&nbsp;a&nbsp;stagnation&nbsp;narrative.&nbsp;It&nbsp;shouldn&#8217;t&nbsp;be&nbsp;taken&nbsp;alone.&nbsp;GDP&nbsp;has&nbsp;grown&nbsp;at&nbsp;over&nbsp;6&nbsp;percent&nbsp;annually&nbsp;across the&nbsp;same&nbsp;period,&nbsp;meaning&nbsp;manufacturing&nbsp;output&nbsp;has&nbsp;expanded&nbsp;substantially&nbsp;in&nbsp;absolute&nbsp;terms&nbsp;even&nbsp;as&nbsp;its<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">share&nbsp;of&nbsp;a&nbsp;growing&nbsp;economy&nbsp;stayed&nbsp;flat.&nbsp;The&nbsp;more&nbsp;precise&nbsp;and&nbsp;more&nbsp;defensible&nbsp;claim&nbsp;is&nbsp;this:&nbsp;manufacturing is growing, but not gaining share relative to services and extraction \u2014 meaning Uganda&#8217;s economy is getting&nbsp;bigger&nbsp;without&nbsp;becoming&nbsp;meaningfully&nbsp;more&nbsp;industrialised&nbsp;in&nbsp;relative&nbsp;terms.&nbsp;That&nbsp;is&nbsp;a&nbsp;real&nbsp;diagnosis. It is&nbsp;different&nbsp;from,&nbsp;and more&nbsp;damaging&nbsp;in&nbsp;its&nbsp;way&nbsp;than,&nbsp;claiming&nbsp;manufacturing&nbsp;itself&nbsp;is&nbsp;stagnant,&nbsp;because it points to a structural ceiling rather than a temporary lull.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<h5 class=\"wp-block-heading\"><strong>Namanve<\/strong><strong>&nbsp;<\/strong><strong>Has<\/strong><strong>&nbsp;<\/strong><strong>the<\/strong><strong>&nbsp;<\/strong><strong>Industrial<\/strong><strong>&nbsp;<\/strong><strong>Parks.<\/strong><strong>&nbsp;<\/strong><strong>Agro-Processing<\/strong><strong>&nbsp;<\/strong><strong>Doesn&#8217;t<\/strong><strong>&nbsp;<\/strong><strong>Have<\/strong><strong>&nbsp;<\/strong><strong>the<\/strong><strong>&nbsp;<\/strong><strong>Incentives.<\/strong><strong><\/strong><\/h5>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">It would be inaccurate to suggest Uganda lacks an industrial policy framework. The Namanve, Kapeeka, Mbale and Luzira industrial parks, the Investment Code&#8217;s export-incentive provisions, and local-content requirements&nbsp;written&nbsp;into&nbsp;the&nbsp;Petroleum&nbsp;Act&nbsp;and&nbsp;enforced&nbsp;through&nbsp;the&nbsp;Petroleum&nbsp;Authority&nbsp;of&nbsp;Uganda&nbsp;and the Uganda National Oil Company&#8217;s procurement rules all exist and predate any current critique. The National Industrial Policy&nbsp;sets explicit value-addition targets.&nbsp;The more precise criticism, and the one that should replace any suggestion of a policy vacuum, is that implementation has been uneven: local-content enforcement is strongest in oil and gas procurement, where it is legally mandated and monitored, and considerably weaker across agro-processing, where value-addition targets exist on paper but incentive structures \u2014 a ten-year tax holiday calibrated for investments above $50 million \u2014 continue to reward capital-intensive, often extractive projects over the mid-sized, labour-intensive manufacturing that would actually&nbsp;diversify&nbsp;supplier&nbsp;networks.&nbsp;The&nbsp;framework&nbsp;is&nbsp;there.&nbsp;The&nbsp;incentive&nbsp;structure&nbsp;inside&nbsp;it&nbsp;is&nbsp;still&nbsp;pointed at the wrong scale of investment.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<h5 class=\"wp-block-heading\"><strong>Coffee\u2019s<\/strong><strong>&nbsp;<\/strong><strong>&#8220;Bean<\/strong><strong>&nbsp;<\/strong><strong>to<\/strong><strong>&nbsp;<\/strong><strong>Beauty&#8221;<\/strong><strong>&nbsp;<\/strong><strong>Story<\/strong><strong>&nbsp;<\/strong><strong>Is<\/strong><strong>&nbsp;<\/strong><strong>Real.<\/strong><strong>&nbsp;<\/strong><strong>The<\/strong><strong>&nbsp;<\/strong><strong>Beans<\/strong><strong>&nbsp;<\/strong><strong>Still<\/strong><strong>&nbsp;<\/strong><strong>Leave<\/strong><strong>&nbsp;Green.<\/strong><strong><\/strong><\/h5>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">Coffee is Uganda&#8217;s best-performing export and its clearest illustration of both progress and its limits. The country&nbsp;shipped&nbsp;roughly&nbsp;8.4&nbsp;million&nbsp;bags&nbsp;worth&nbsp;$2.4&nbsp;billion&nbsp;in&nbsp;the&nbsp;year&nbsp;to&nbsp;October&nbsp;2025,&nbsp;the&nbsp;largest coffee export performance in its history. The Uganda Coffee Development Authority&#8217;s roasting and packaging initiatives, its pivot toward Asian buyers to reduce reliance on European demand, and geospatial farm-registration&nbsp;to meet EU deforestation-compliance rules are active, funded programmes, not aspirations \u2014 this&nbsp;transition&nbsp;is&nbsp;genuinely&nbsp;underway.&nbsp;What&nbsp;has&nbsp;not&nbsp;changed&nbsp;is&nbsp;the&nbsp;scale:&nbsp;the&nbsp;overwhelming&nbsp;share&nbsp;of&nbsp;export volume&nbsp;still&nbsp;leaves&nbsp;Uganda&nbsp;as&nbsp;green&nbsp;beans,&nbsp;with&nbsp;roasting&nbsp;and&nbsp;retail&nbsp;margins&nbsp;captured&nbsp;by&nbsp;buyers&nbsp;in&nbsp;Italy&nbsp;and Germany.&nbsp;The&nbsp;accurate&nbsp;claim&nbsp;is&nbsp;not&nbsp;that&nbsp;Uganda&nbsp;has&nbsp;failed&nbsp;to&nbsp;begin&nbsp;moving&nbsp;up&nbsp;the&nbsp;value&nbsp;chain&nbsp;in&nbsp;coffee.&nbsp;It is that the value-addition programme, while real, remains marginal relative to the volume still leaving the country unprocessed \u2014 and the gap between programme and scale is the thing worth watching over the next several harvests.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<h5 class=\"wp-block-heading\"><strong>Why<\/strong><strong>&nbsp;<\/strong><strong>Hanoi and<\/strong><strong>&nbsp;<\/strong><strong>Kigali<\/strong><strong>&nbsp;<\/strong><strong>Are<\/strong><strong>&nbsp;<\/strong><strong>the Wrong<\/strong><strong>&nbsp;<\/strong><strong>Mirror<\/strong><strong>&nbsp;<\/strong><strong>\u2014<\/strong><strong>&nbsp;<\/strong><strong>and Addis<\/strong><strong>&nbsp;<\/strong><strong>Is the<\/strong><strong>&nbsp;<\/strong><strong>Right <\/strong><strong>One<\/strong><strong><\/strong><\/h5>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">Vietnam, Rwanda and Bangladesh are frequently invoked in this debate, and each comparison carries a genuine asymmetry worth naming rather than glossing over. Vietnam sits inside Asia&#8217;s densest shipping-lane network; Uganda is landlocked, absorbing Mombasa and Dar es Salaam transit costs on every container. Rwanda manages 13 million people with no resource-curse sequencing problem; Uganda manages 48 million alongside an oil discovery that requires fundamentally different fiscal pacing. Bangladesh&#8217;s&nbsp;garment-export&nbsp;growth&nbsp;relied&nbsp;on&nbsp;trade-quota&nbsp;arrangements&nbsp;specific&nbsp;to&nbsp;an&nbsp;era&nbsp;of&nbsp;global&nbsp;trade<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">policy&nbsp;that&nbsp;no&nbsp;longer&nbsp;exists&nbsp;to&nbsp;replicate.&nbsp;None&nbsp;of&nbsp;these&nbsp;asymmetries&nbsp;excuse&nbsp;slower&nbsp;industrial&nbsp;upgrading,&nbsp;but a fairer comparator is Ethiopia \u2014 landlocked-adjacent, a large population, a state-directed industrial-park model,&nbsp;and&nbsp;a&nbsp;comparable&nbsp;starting&nbsp;GDP&nbsp;per&nbsp;capita&nbsp;a&nbsp;decade&nbsp;ago.&nbsp;Ethiopia&#8217;s&nbsp;experience&nbsp;is&nbsp;instructive&nbsp;precisely because it has not been a clean success: several industrial parks have struggled with occupancy and debt sustainability, a cautionary case Uganda should study in detail before scaling its own park model further, rather than treating industrial parks themselves as a guaranteed solution.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<h5 class=\"wp-block-heading\"><strong>The<\/strong><strong>&nbsp;<\/strong><strong>Netherlands,<\/strong><strong>&nbsp;<\/strong><strong>the<\/strong><strong>&nbsp;<\/strong><strong>Oil,<\/strong><strong>&nbsp;<\/strong><strong>and<\/strong><strong>&nbsp;<\/strong><strong>a<\/strong><strong>&nbsp;<\/strong><strong>Shrinking<\/strong><strong>&nbsp;<\/strong><strong>COMESA<\/strong><strong>&nbsp;<\/strong><strong>\u2014<\/strong><strong>&nbsp;<\/strong><strong>What&#8217;s<\/strong><strong>&nbsp;<\/strong><strong>Actually<\/strong><strong>&nbsp;<\/strong><strong>at <\/strong><strong>Stake<\/strong><strong><\/strong><\/h5>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">The concentration of Uganda&#8217;s FDI in oil and gas, the decline in intra-regional COMESA investment \u2014 down from 15 percent of greenfield project count in 2019 to 12 percent by 2024, and from 12 percent to just 5 percent by value \u2014 and the gap between agro-processing policy and agro-processing enforcement are not contestable points; they are documented in Uganda&#8217;s own investment-climate data and in UNCTAD&#8217;s regional reporting. The question worth debating is not whether these problems exist, but whether Uganda&#8217;s current sequencing \u2014 oil capital first, industrial diversification enforcement second \u2014 is a defensible strategy given where the country sits in the resource-development cycle, or whether the enforcement&nbsp;gap&nbsp;in&nbsp;agro-processing&nbsp;and&nbsp;manufacturing&nbsp;incentives&nbsp;should&nbsp;be&nbsp;closed&nbsp;now,&nbsp;ahead&nbsp;of&nbsp;First&nbsp;Oil, rather than treated as a problem for the post-oil fiscal surplus to solve.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<h5 class=\"wp-block-heading\"><strong>The<\/strong><strong>&nbsp;<\/strong><strong>Test<\/strong><strong>&nbsp;<\/strong><strong>Uganda<\/strong><strong>&nbsp;<\/strong><strong>Hasn&#8217;t<\/strong><strong>&nbsp;<\/strong><strong>Sat <\/strong><strong>Yet<\/strong><strong><\/strong><\/h5>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"wp-block-paragraph\">Uganda&#8217;s&nbsp;investment&nbsp;story&nbsp;is&nbsp;neither&nbsp;the&nbsp;straightforward&nbsp;success&nbsp;suggested&nbsp;by&nbsp;record&nbsp;FDI&nbsp;headlines&nbsp;nor&nbsp;the structural failure implied by comparing a construction-phase resource economy to mature manufacturing exporters a generation ahead of it. It is a country with a genuine industrial policy framework, uneven enforcement of that framework outside the oil sector, and a narrowing window \u2014 the same global capital reallocation&nbsp;toward&nbsp;the&nbsp;Global&nbsp;South&nbsp;that&nbsp;is&nbsp;not&nbsp;guaranteed&nbsp;to&nbsp;remain&nbsp;this&nbsp;generous&nbsp;\u2014&nbsp;in&nbsp;which&nbsp;to&nbsp;close&nbsp;the gap&nbsp;between&nbsp;policy&nbsp;design&nbsp;and&nbsp;policy&nbsp;discipline&nbsp;before&nbsp;First&nbsp;Oil&nbsp;determines&nbsp;whether&nbsp;Uganda&nbsp;diversifies&nbsp;or simply&nbsp;industrializes&nbsp;its&nbsp;extraction.&nbsp;That&nbsp;is&nbsp;the&nbsp;test&nbsp;that&nbsp;has&nbsp;not&nbsp;yet&nbsp;been&nbsp;sat.&nbsp;How&nbsp;it&nbsp;is&nbsp;answered,&nbsp;more&nbsp;than any&nbsp;FDI&nbsp;figure published this year, will determine what&nbsp;Uganda&#8217;s economy&nbsp;looks like a decade from&nbsp;now.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Record FDI and record coffee earnings are genuine achievements \u2014 but they are arriving during a capital-formation phase whose real test, converting inflow into industrial upgrading, is still to come.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":27983,"featured_media":42316,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"jnews-multi-image_gallery":[],"jnews_single_post":{"format":"standard"},"jnews_primary_category":[],"jnews_paywall_metabox":[],"jnews_override_counter":[],"footnotes":""},"categories":[101,473],"tags":[31,10266,9926,144],"class_list":["post-43092","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-business","category-opinions","tag-featured","tag-first-oil","tag-richard-rays-kyorakunde","tag-uganda"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/ugmirror.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/43092","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/ugmirror.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/ugmirror.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/ugmirror.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/27983"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/ugmirror.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=43092"}],"version-history":[{"count":1,"href":"https:\/\/ugmirror.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/43092\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":43093,"href":"https:\/\/ugmirror.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/43092\/revisions\/43093"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/ugmirror.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/42316"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/ugmirror.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=43092"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/ugmirror.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=43092"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/ugmirror.com\/index.php\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=43092"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}