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AFCFTA'S Guided Trade Initiative Takes Off, Set to Ease and Boost Intra-african Trade

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8 countries kick off trade under African Continenta­l Free Trade Area's preferenti­al terms in step towards One African Market

A pilot initiative to accelerate trading among countries under the African Continenta­l Free Trade Area (AFCFTA) has kicked off with consignmen­ts of Kenyan tea being shipped to Ghana earlier this month.

One year of free trading in Africa calls for celebratio­n despite teething problemsaf­cfta: Implementi­ng Africa's free trade pact the best stimulus for POSTCOVID-19 economies The Guided Trade Initiative (GTI) was launched in Accra, Ghana on 7 October and seeks to allow commercial­ly meaningful trading, and test the operationa­l, institutio­nal, legal and trade policy environmen­t under the AFCFTA.

"The products earmarked to trade under this initiative include ceramic tiles, batteries, tea, coffee, processed meat products, corn starch, sugar, pasta, glucose syrup, dried fruits, and sisal fiber, among others, in line with the AFCFTA focus on value chain developmen­t," says Secretary-general of the AFCFTA Secretaria­t, Wamkele Mene.

The eight countries participat­ing in the GTI are and represent five regions of Africa.

Other countries that have met the requiremen­ts and deployed the AFCFTA E-tariff Book and the Rules of Origin Manual and have officially published their tariff rates and have had them approved by the Secretaria­t--will also be able to take part in the Guided Trade Initiative. At least 96 products will be traded under the GTI and the initiative will be reviewed annually to expand the list of countries.

Mr. Mene says intra-continenta­l trade and investment will be rapidly boosted in the coming years and months because of the eliminatio­n of "Africa's financial borders" and the launch of the Pan-african Payment and Settlement Systems(papss), which "will release the continent from overdepend­ence on external players and factors."

The AFCFTA Secretaria­t will support the eight countries in trading, from shipment to customs clearing, and presents an opportunit­y to monitor the impacts of trade documents and procedures on pre-selected goods to get a sense of if tariffs are reduced in line with AFCFTA procedures.

It will be a test of the effectiven­ess of the free trade area's operations and policies, experts believe.

Under the AFCFTA, up to 90 per cent of liberalise­d goods will have tariffs reduced by the latest 2030 and 7 per cent by 2035. Countries are allowed to tax 3 per cent of produced goods.

The AFCFTA, which came into force on 1 January 2021, establishe­d the largest free-trade area in the world by the number of participat­ing countries. It consolidat­es a market of about $1.3 billion in 55 AU member countries with a combined GDP of $3.4 trillion. In addition, it could potentiall­y lift 50 million Africans out of poverty and increase the income of the continent by $470 billion.

(Africa Renewal)

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