THISDAY

‘EPA Vital for Nigeria’s Economic Diversific­ation, Regional

- Jonathan Eze

The European Union (EU) and ECOWAS Commission have urged the managers of the Nigerian economy to sign the Economic Partnershi­p Agreement (EPA) to fast-track its quest for economic diversific­ation and regional integratio­n.

The Head of Trade and Economic Section, EU Delegation to Nigeria and ECOWAS, Filippo Amato, gave the charge during the Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industry, LCCI, Stakeholde­rs forum on EUECOWAS Economic Partnershi­p Agreement in Lagos recently.

According to him, signing the EPA would accelerate Nigeria’s industrial developmen­t, discard EU tariffs on Nigerian exports; protect domestic industries, agricultur­al and consumer products.

“All the goods that Nigeria can produce are excluded from the list to protect your industries and the goods to be imported are capital goods, machinery and inputs that are useful for the industrial sector. All West African exports will gradually reduce duties on 75 per cent of EU imports over a long transition period of 20 years,” he said.

He stressed that manufactur­ers would also benefit from lower input prices under the agreement, adding that EPA would enhance cooperatio­n on issues such as standards, trading, agricultur­e, investment and custom cooperatio­n.

Also speaking at the event, the ECOWAS Commission­er, Trade, Customs and Free Movement, Laouali Chaibou, said the overall objective of the stakeholde­rs forum was to sensitise key stakeholde­rs on the content of the EPA, in order to better understand and disseminat­e factual informatio­n.

He said the advantages offered by the EPA tend to make the West Africa region the production center for export to Europe, pointing out that the integratio­n of ECOWAS and Nigeria in the global value chains involves the ability for Nigeria to attract investment­s from all walks of life either to transform local raw materials or to transform semi-finished products, saying that the EPA is one of the instrument­s to achieve this.

“The ECOWAS commission remains committed to building West Africa’s capacity on the EPA. We believe that the different stakeholde­rs gathered here have a critical role to play in this process,” he said.

The president, LCCI, Nike Akande, said the chamber has followed the debate on the EPA, maintainin­g that as members of the organised private sector (OPS), it deemed it fit to provide a platform where all stakeholde­rs could meet and discuss the issues.

“There are arguments for and against Nigeria’s endorsemen­t of the EPA, but we believe we can find a middle ground. In internatio­nal trade, competitiv­eness is paramount for any country to get a fair deal. We would therefore continue to stress the imperative of an enabling environmen­t to deepen the competitiv­eness of firms in Nigeria,” she said.

Meanwhile, the national president, NACCIMA, Iyalode Alaba Lawson, said as a country in the process of diversifyi­ng its economy, protection­ism may hamper Nigeria’s quest to achieve a sustainabl­e economy, stressing that at the same time, without adequate room to grow, certain sectors of the economy may be scuttled by global competitio­n before they even get a chance to develop.

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