Provincial Economy and Investment
Provincial Economy
The Provincial Growth and Development Strategy (PGDS) represents both
development opportunities and provincial challenges. These are parameters for
formulation of detailed operational plans and the identification of specific
instruments for delivery and transformation.
It further identifies a 5-year multi-sectoral growth and development strategic
plan of the Provincial Government. The strategy is supported by the following
policies/strategies:
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An elaborate provincial economic development strategy.
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A spatial framework for co-ordinated public and private sector infrastructure
investment.
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An integrated public transport policy.
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Land Development Objectives of the Limpopo Urban and Rural transitional
councils.
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National Crime Prevention Strategy.
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Taking Limpopo into the New Millennium.
Investment
For more information click the link below;
link: www.til.co.za
Limpopo is the natural resource treasure chest of South Africa, if not the whole
of southern Africa. It boasts some of the greatest reserves of agriculture,
mineral and tourism resources many of which remain hugely under-exploited. The
province is also linked to the Maputo Development Corridor through Phalaborwa
Spatial Development Initiative, a network of road and rail corridors connecting
to the major seaports will open up Limpopo and surrounding regions for trade
and investment. This is complimented by the presence of airports in major
centres of the province including Ellisras, Makhado, Musina, Phalaborwa,
Mokopane, Thabazimbi, Tzaneen, Thohoyandou and Bela-Bela as well as the Gateway
International airport in Polokwane.
In terms of Agriculture Limpopo could be described as the garden of South Africa
and or the whole continent, given its rich fruit and vegetable production. The
province produces 75% of the country’s mangoes, 65% of its papaya, 36% of its
tea, 25% of its citrus, bananas, and litchis, 60% of its avocados, two thirds
of its tomatoes, 285,000 tons of potatoes. Other products include coffee, nuts,
guavas, sisal, cotton and tobacco, timber with more than 170 plantations. Apart
from all these, there is cotton, sunflower, maize, wheat cultivation as well as
grape. Most of the higher lying areas are devoted to cattle and game ranching,
earning a reputation for quality biltong, a popular South African delicacy of
salted, dried meat.
Limpopo is also endowed with the abundance of its mineral resources, locating
mining as the critical sector of the economy in the Province, which contributes
22% of the GGP. The platinum group include platinum itself, chromium, nickel,
cobalt, vanadium, tin, limestone and uranium clay. Other reserves include
antinomy, phosphates, fluorspar, gold, diamonds, copper, emeralds, scheelites,
magnetite, vermiculite, silicon, mica, black granite, corundum, feldspar and
salt.
Already the Chinese company, Rockfield Pty., has set up a granite mining venture
here with the raw material being processed into mosaic tiles.
As if all this is not enough there are financial incentives through a package
put down by the National Government. A wide range of incentives to investors
include, a tax holiday for up to six years. As a result of this potential the
Provincial government has established TIL (Trade Investment Limpopo). It offers
a wide range of services to entrepreneurs and investors interested in setting
up business in the Limpopo. It specialises in helping to attract inward
investment companies to find the best opportunities for acquisitions or green
field investments in the Limpopo. This includes setting up joint ventures with
local partners, cross holdings of equity between an overseas and local partner
or collaborative agreements in the field such as research and development,
transfer of technology or sales and distribution.
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