Manufacturing of Senegal

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Also known as: République du Sénégal, Republic of Senegal

News

France faces challenges in Africa as Chad and Senegal end defence cooperation Dec. 20, 2024, 10:21 PM ET (The Hindu)
Dakar’s Air Quality Plummets as Saharan Dust Descends on Senegal Dec. 19, 2024, 1:37 AM ET (Bloomberg)
Senegal Weighs Debt Management Review After Financial Audit Dec. 18, 2024, 1:39 AM ET (Bloomberg)
Senegal Considers Negotiating Debt Maturities with Investors Dec. 17, 2024, 11:47 PM ET (Bloomberg)

Industrial production in Senegal is more developed than in most Western African countries. Both food-processing and handicraft industries are well established. Most of the former is located in the Cape Verde area, where many plants produce peanut oil. In good years Senegal is the leading producer of peanut oil in French-speaking sub-Saharan Africa. However, the world market for this product is decreasing, and the government’s push for the greater privatization of markets has led to peanut cooperatives’ selling directly to local oil producers. Developments in the chemicals industry, metalworking, mineral, and truck and bicycle assembly plants are aimed at processing the country’s own raw materials and reducing reliance on imports. Senegal has fish canneries, a shoe factory, and a cement-manufacturing plant, the last two located in Rufisque. Other industrial establishments, all of which are located in Dakar, include flour mills, a textile plant, a sugar refinery, a tobacco factory, and a brewery, in addition to a naval shipyard, chemical plants, and an automobile assembly plant. Traditional handicrafts, such as wood carvings, glass paintings, jewelry, painted fabrics, drums, and masks, are produced mainly in Dakar and Saint-Louis, home to the most-skilled artisans.

Finance and trade

Senegal’s currency is the CFA franc, which has been officially pegged to the euro since 2002. Currency is issued by the Central Bank of West African States, an agency of the West African Economic and Monetary Union, consisting of eight countries (Benin, Burkina Faso, Côte d’Ivoire, Guinea-Bissau, Mali, Niger, Senegal, and Togo) that were once French colonies in Africa. Other state and private banks exist, including Islamic ones. A stock exchange based in Abidjan, Côte d’Ivoire, also services Senegal.

The value of imports is usually greater than that of exports, and Senegal generally has a significant balance-of-trade deficit. The principal imports are agricultural products, capital goods, and petroleum products, and exports include seafood, refined petroleum, chemical products, peanut oil, and phosphates. France, Mali, Nigeria, and the Netherlands are major trading partners.

Services

Tourism, one of the country’s primary sources of foreign exchange, has made Senegal one of the most visited countries in West Africa. Although most of the tourists are Europeans, the government has tried to attract others, especially Americans. Gorée Island, site of a former warehouse of enslaved people, is a popular attraction, as are Senegal’s national parks. Dakar is an important international conference centre. Tourism declined in 1993 because of instability in the Casamance area but had recovered by the mid-1990s. At the beginning of the 21st century, the country was accommodating about a half million tourists per year.

Labour and taxation

The majority of Senegal’s labour force are agricultural workers, although a sizable minority work as traders. The constitution guarantees workers the right to unionize, but the union can legally exist only after registering with the Ministry of the Interior. The constitution grants all people the right to work; however, until 1989 husbands were allowed to prevent their wives from working outside the home. Women, who represented some four-tenths of the labour force at the beginning of the 21st century, were employed mainly in the agricultural sector, although they were well represented in small trade. Women merchants often join the African Network for the Promotion of Working Women (Réseau Africain pour la Promotion de la Femme Travailleuse; RAFET), an organization that provides employment training and support to women.

Most governmental revenue is obtained indirectly from local taxes on alcohol, gasoline, tobacco, firearms, automobiles, and commerce. Land, professional licenses, profits, and income are directly taxed.

Transportation and telecommunications

The transport network has developed primarily in the western part of the country within the area bounded by Saint-Louis, Kaolack, and Dakar. About half of Senegal’s extensive road network is passable year-round.

The rail system, which is being rehabilitated and expanded, includes a line from Saint-Louis to Dakar, with a branch line running from Louga inland to Linguère, and a line from Dakar to the Niger River at Koulikoro, Mali. Locomotives are run entirely on diesel fuel. Phosphates represent the great bulk of freight carried by rail.

Senegal’s three seaports are Kaolack, Ziguinchor, and Dakar. Only Dakar is an international port; the others are limited to handling local traffic. Dakar is one of the busiest ports in Western Africa and accommodates ships up to 100,000 tons along 6 miles (10 km) of quay. The quays provide refrigerated facilities that serve 1,000 fishing boats each year.

The international airport of Dakar-Yoff near Dakar is served by a number of airlines, including Air Sénégal. Its three runways can accommodate any kind of aircraft. Airports at Saint-Louis and several other cities provide domestic service.

Historically, Senegal’s rivers, especially the Sénégal, were important transportation arteries, despite limited navigability. However, their significance has diminished since the end of the 19th century, with the construction of rail lines. Navigation of the Sénégal was facilitated by the completion of the Diama and Manantali dams in the late 20th century. Activity on the Saloum River centres on peanut shipping from Kaolack, and traffic on the Casamance is to and from the port of Ziguinchor.

Senegal has a strong, reliable telephone system, especially in urban areas. Sonatel, the national telecommunications company, provides telephone service. Senegal became wired for Internet use in 1996, providing the opportunity for many technology-based services to develop in the country. Internet and mobile phone services are provided by a small number of private companies, as well as Sonatel. Both services are growing in popularity in Senegal.