Shanghai Daily

Reforms needed to facilitate trade in Africa

- Asmita Parshotam

WITH some countries locked in a trade war, climate action lagging behind climate reality, and the World Trade Organizati­on’s Appellate Body at risk of becoming inoperable, the theme of last week’s WTO public forum — “Trading Forward: Adapting to a Changing World” — couldn’t be more appropriat­e. But if the global trading system is to be adapted to 21st-Century realities, careful attention must be paid to the needs of developing countries.

Consider Africa, which has been working hard to deepen intra-continenta­l trade and integratio­n. While such efforts — most notably the African Continenta­l Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) — have the potential to spur growth and developmen­t, their impact depends on complement­ary global reforms and countries’ implementa­tion of WTO agreements. Success is far from guaranteed.

The Trade Facilitati­on Agreement, which entered into force in 2017, is a case in point. One of the few WTO agreements to be ratified in recent years, the TFA places developing members’ ambitions at the forefront. It aims to expedite the movement, clearance and release of goods across borders; establishe­s measures for effective cooperatio­n between customs and other relevant authoritie­s; and provides for technical assistance and capacity building.

The TFA recognizes that trade facilitati­on rests on three key pillars: simplifica­tion, harmonizat­ion and transparen­cy. Given its global uptake, it has the potential to ensure that reforms reflecting this recognitio­n are “locked in” across countries, including those whose government­s might otherwise be reluctant to implement them.

For African countries that manage to implement the TFA fully, the gains could be massive. According to a 2015 WTO study, the TFA could lead to a 35 percent increase in exports from least-developed African countries, a 3.5 percent boost to economic growth across developing economies and a 20 percent improvemen­t in the diversific­ation of exports.

Yet, for many African countries, implementi­ng trade-facilitati­on reforms will require overcoming concurrent challenges, such as supply constraint­s, slow economic growth, inefficien­t customs controls and poor border coordinati­on. In this sense, the AfCFTA — which recognizes the hard and soft infrastruc­ture challenges hampering trade-facilitati­on reforms on the continent — complement­s the TFA. But, because the AfCFTA is yet to be implemente­d, its contributi­on remains theoretica­l.

To enable developing countries to pursue complement­ary reforms, the TFA allows them longer implementa­tion periods, according to their individual needs and priorities. At the same time, it provides a kind of “matchmakin­g mechanism” for donors to provide technical and financial assistance.

But for these partnershi­ps to work, recipient countries must identify their priorities, potential barriers to progress, and the interventi­ons that are needed to overcome them. They must then communicat­e their conclusion­s clearly to the donors with which they are matched.

A recent study by the South African Institute of Internatio­nal Affairs (SAIIA) goes some way toward demonstrat­ing how to do that, by examining the case of land-locked, low-income Zambia. Among the study’s key findings is that Zambia must go “from land-locked to landlinked” by creating effective regional transporta­tion networks and building close relations with neighbors, in order to ensure well-functionin­g customs administra­tion, border control and access to ports. Both physical infrastruc­ture and informatio­n and communicat­ion technology are essential.

Challenges

Although Zambia does engage its neighbors in rolling out one-stop border posts, these working relationsh­ips are not without their challenges and require a balancing act between shared regional goals and national priorities. Carrying out port-of-entry operations at a single common border crossing would reduce time spent at borders, lower logistics costs, foster cooperatio­n and enable the integratio­n of informatio­n and risk management. To secure the necessary buy-in for this and other trade-facilitati­on reforms, the private sector must be included in decision-making.

The SAIIA study also underscore­s the need for Zambia to embed its tradefacil­itation reform priorities into the agendas of a range of government agencies, thereby improving coordinati­on.

All of these agencies must understand not only national priorities, but also how efforts can be directed toward improving trade conditions and deepening regional integratio­n, thereby contributi­ng to wider global developmen­t goals.

Training programs and capacitybu­ilding support offered by the United Nations Conference on Trade and Developmen­t and the Global Alliance for Trade Facilitati­on can support this effort by helping to create a pool of government personnel with the knowledge and skills to implement long-term reforms.

The TFA, like any WTO agreement, is a powerful tool for progress. But it cannot work in isolation. The necessary complement­ary reforms addressing specific country-level challenges depend on the proper functionin­g of the broader global trading system.

That is why, rather than allowing a couple of large actors to derail that system, the experts gathering for the WTO public forum last week must advance a vision for a system that accounts for all member states’ needs, beginning with the developing countries that are too often left behind.

Asmita Parshotam, a research associate at the South African Institute of Internatio­nal Affairs, is a policy expert at the European Union-funded Ecosystem Developmen­t for Small Enterprise Programme.

Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2019. www.project-syndicate.org

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