Business monthly September 07
 
EDITOR'S NOTE COVER STORY EXECUTIVE LIFE
VIEWPOINT IN PERSON SUBSCRIPTION FORM
IN BRIEF MARKET WATCH ADVERTISING RATES
IN DEPTH CORPORATE CLINIC THE CHAMBER
 

After three years as head of the nation’s investment authority, Ziad Bahaa El-Din, chairman of the General Authority for Investment & Free Zones (GAFI), is returning to the private sector. As he prepares to leave office, he reflects on the sweeping reforms that have taken place at GAFI during his term, and its transformation from investor foe to friend.

BY REHAB EL BAKRY

Ziad Bahaa El-Din rode in on the wave of optimism that followed the appointment of the Nazif government in the summer of 2004. By tapping an outsider to head the nation’s investment authority, investment minister Mahmoud Mohieldin was sending a clear message that substance outranked seniority. Any career bureaucrat could manage the authority. But Bahaa El-Din’s dual specialization in law and economics, and his practitioner’s experience in both Egypt and the US, represented an opportunity to infuse the authority with fresh ideas and effective solutions.

An overachiever by nature, Bahaa El-Din completed an economics degree at the American University in Cairo while simultaneously finishing a law degree at Cairo University. The dual major, he says, aimed at helping him better understand the immutable connection between economics and law. He went on to earn a Master’s degree in business law from King’s College in the UK, and a Ph.D. in banking law from the prestigious London School of Economics.

Upon graduating, Bahaa El-Din practiced corporate and commercial law in the US and Egypt. In 1997, his work caught the eye of then minister of economy Youssef Boutros-Ghali, who recruited him as an adviser. After three years, he returned to private practice, establishing his own private law firm. Now, after three years at the helm of the General Authority for Investment & Free Zones (GAFI), he is once again returning to private practice – this time with a deep sense of satisfaction that he has helped create a better investment climate.

Upon taking the helm of GAFI in September 2004, Bahaa El-Din set about reassessing the authority’s role. “For me, where to start in the investment authority was crystal clear; you start by re-identifying the role of your organization and its procedures,” he explains. “This comes naturally after you’ve determined what is wrong with your perception of your own role.”

Somewhat ironically, given his history as a chronic multi-tasker, Bahaa El-Din identified that GAFI’s chief problem lay in the fact that it was trying to be all things at once. He recognized that GAFI’s effectiveness lay not in its role as an investment regulator, but as an investment facilitator. “If you say that GAFI is a regulator of investment, that immediately implies and entails certain functions. But if you [consider instead that GAFI] is not supposed to be a regulator, it is supposed to be a facilitator, things fall into place. You immediately begin to look at things very differently.”

Bahaa El-Din says GAFI’s preoccupation with regulating investment made it adversarial to investors and reduced it to a bureaucratic sand trap. He says investors were being asked to supply 10 different copies of 10 different documents to GAFI just to open a small business. GAFI should not have been asking for these documents in the first place, he contends. “One of the reasons why it took months to establish a company [in Egypt], whereas now it takes three days maximum, had to do with GAFI requiring certain documents which would be natural if it were a regulator. For example, investors were requested to submit feasibility studies of their projects. As a facilitator, [however,] it is none of my business to look at the investor’s feasibility study. This is someone who is risking his own money in a project; if he doesn’t bother doing the right study, he will face the consequences.”

He concluded that GAFI could be more effective by focusing on its role as an investment facilitator and promoter, and leaving the role of regulator to the investment ministry and other agencies. His first order of business was to purge the agency of its regulator legacy. Bahaa El-Din and his team spent months reviewing every procedure, required approval and detail, asking themselves how each requirement fitted into GAFI’s role as a facilitator and promoter. If it did not, then it was either adjusted or dropped.

The authority established a new relation with the Ministry of Investment. The ministry develops the policies for investment; GAFI finds ways to facilitate their implementation. And because it deals directly with investors, the authority also received feedback on the consequences of investment policy, which it relayed to the ministry.

One benefit of this relationship, confesses Bahaa El-Din, is that it frees GAFI from the political repercussions of investment policy. That responsibility now sat squarely on the minister’s shoulders. “The key role of a minister is that he is the political front; he’s the one who bears the responsibility, he’s the one who goes and defends his work in parliament and coordinates with other ministers,” he explains.

Reflecting on his three years in office, Bahaa El-Din says GAFI has played a key role in the sharp increase in foreign direct investment (FDI) during the past three years. Egypt’s total FDI in the first three quarters of this year reached $9 billion, compared to $6.1 billion in all of 2006 and $3.9 billion in 2004.

But one achievement he is particularly proud of is the launch of the One-Stop Shop (OSS) for investors at GAFI’s headquarters in Nasr City. Opened in early 2005, the OSS brings representatives from various government agencies under one roof so that new investors can quickly obtain all the permits, licenses and information they need to start a business. While the OSS has significantly reduced the time it takes to open a business – down from six to eight months in 2003 to three days today – Bahaa El-Din acknowledges that it is not a panacea for the country’s investor problems. “To be perfectly honest, the problem with one-stop shops is that there’s always a tendency to exaggerate what they can do. I’m very careful not to project it as doing more than it actually does, which is to bring together various government agencies in the same place in order to try and reduce the time spent by investors.”

Previously, he says, investors were required to visit at least seven different agencies in different parts of the city just to register their business. GAFI has cut through the red tape of the procedure, reducing it to a single visit to the OSS. In most cases, the investors deal only with GAFI representatives. “So as far as you’re concerned, you’re actually dealing with two or three people at the most and you don’t see the back office,” he says. “Our guy takes the papers from you and finishes them with the lawyers’ syndicate and then with the commercial registration and then with the chamber of commerce... so you don’t feel what is happening.”

Bahaa El-Din cautions, however, that while the OSS has obviated much of the run-around, it is often oversimplified. While some investors may be able to complete all their forms in one visit at one window, GAFI representatives cannot handle every aspect of business registration. Many investors will still need to visit representatives of various ministries and government authorities. The good news, he says, is that many of these agencies now have representatives in the same building.

In certain cases, particularly where safety testing is involved, the ministries and authorities have insisted to retain control over the licensing process, in which case investors will need to visit their physical office. “This is not necessarily a bad thing,” he insists. “It is just that some services and licenses cannot be issued without reference to the original body. For example, you cannot have someone sitting in the OSS issue a license for a new pharmaceutical product because you cannot expect someone sitting here, without access to a laboratory, to approve a [drug].”

This is a logical limitation, he stresses, and one that is not likely to change. He points out that the OSS was never intended to replace all government bodies, but rather to facilitate interaction with them. “The [OSS] is not a solution [in itself], it is a great facilitating tool, but this has to go hand in hand with the continuous attempt to review the actual policies of the authorities and the actual law; it doesn’t [work] alone. It’s not a solution in itself, but it does help a lot.”

GAFI’s transformation into an investment promotion authority is in line with Bahaa El-Din’s personal conviction that Egypt cannot simply sit back and wait for investors to come knocking; it must proactively seek them out. “There’s no doubt that we have managed initially to establish ourselves as facilitators – someone comes to us with a problem and we try to help out. The next step is to do general promotion, which means promoting Egypt internationally from a macro point of view,” he says.

He says that with investor-friendly policies in place, the natural progression was for GAFI to inform potential investors of the changes that have taken place in the country since 2004. Among these activities was a campaign launched to coincide with the World Economic Forum’s meeting held in Sharm Al Sheikh in May 2006, with the tagline “Egypt: Open for Business.” The investment promotion campaign, which highlighted the economic reforms implemented by the Nazif government, was carried overseas by high-profile trade missions. Delegates discussed the country’s improved macroeconomic indicators, bureaucratic reforms, tax and customs reform, and strategic bilateral and multilateral trade agreements.

While general promotion of Egypt’s investment opportunities is important, Bahaa El-Din says the future lies in targeted investment promotion. He explains that instead of going to various countries and telling them come to Egypt, promoters identify 10 multinationals and take tailored presentations to them. “It’s like the difference between shooting with a machine gun, and a sniper rifle. You fire a machine gun if you’re just trying to get anyone’s attention, but after a while, you need to know you’re actually [hitting the right target],” he says.

In narrowing down its targets, GAFI’s team identified which sectors had the most potential for investment then created a shortlist of multinationals in these sectors that would conceivably benefit from operations in Egypt. The team identified what factors would appeal to these firms – such as Egypt’s low energy costs and pool of cheap, skilled labor – and tailored each pitch to suit the targeted company.

Bahaa El-Din says he is immensely proud of GAFI’s work so far, particularly the fact that this new thinking is coming from an old team, dispelling the myth that government employees cannot be efficient workers. He points out that of GAFI’s 2,400 employees, less than 30, and just two managers, were brought in from outside the organization as part of its transformation.

The biggest problem he found upon taking the helm of the authority was that in many cases the staff were working in roles for which they were neither suited nor trained. And yet they were being held accountable. “I think that, for the most part, when government employees fail, it is not their failure. It is the failure of their bosses,” he says. “We had people in places who weren’t given enough training or manuals to work by. [They believe that] if anyone makes a mistake, they would end up in jail. And then you expect them to have initiative?”

He says a full review was made of all GAFI positions and procedure manuals were created for all functions. Staff were reassigned according to their skills and given both the tools and the training to complete their assignments. A new working protocol aimed at ending the aversion staff had of making decisions for fear of being hung out to dry over simple errors.

Now that he looks back on it, Bahaa El-Din believes that the changes that have taken place in GAFI over the past few years have benefited investors, particularly medium-sized firms. “Large enterprises have always had enough power, money to spend, capacity to hire the best lawyers and accountants, so they have always had a better chance of getting the best help. But when you improve the regulatory environment, the ones who benefit the most are the medium enterprises, because they are the ones that really feel the difference the reforms have made.”

As he prepares to leave office, Bahaa El-Din says he will continue to be involved with GAFI as head of its newly formed board of trustees. He hopes that the authority will continue to introduce positive changes to Egypt’s investment climate, and reinforce its role as a friend to investors. “Three days after I joined GAFI... an old friend told me that if I wanted to do something helpful, please make GAFI disappear. Now, I can tell him that I haven’t made GAFI disappear, but I’m confident that the reasons why he wanted it to disappear have disappeared.”



Submit your comment

Top

   
         Site Developed and Maintained by the Business Information Center of AmCham Egypt
Copyright©2008 American Chamber of Commerce in Egypt