THISDAY

Osinbajo: Nigeria Likely to Lose Most to AfCFTA Implementa­tion

Says FG committed to promote intra-Africa trade

- GboyegaAki­nsanmi

The Vice President, Prof. Yemi Osinbajo at the weekend disclosed that Nigeria, being possibly the largest market in Africa, would likely lose most to the implementa­tion of the Agreement Establishi­ng the African Continenta­l Free Trade Area (AfCFTA).

Despite its decision not to ratify the agreement, Osinbajo noted that the federal government was currently pursuing a rigorous domestic and wide consultati­ve process with all stakeholde­rs in the public and private sector on the said regional agreement.

He made the remarks in Lagos at the weekend during the Africa Trade Forum 2018: AfCFTA Ratificati­on and Implementa­tion under a theme, “A Game Changer for African Economies.”

Speaking at the forum, Osinbajo said AfCFTA “is probably the most significan­t Pan African trade agreement in this generation. Nigeria, being possibly the largest market in Africa today, is most likely to benefit the most or lose the most from the implementa­tion of the agreement.”

According to the vice president, this is because it recognises the benefits of promoting intraAfric­an trade for developmen­t, job creation, poverty reduction and modernisat­ion.

In response to the nation-wide stakeholde­r engagement on October 22, Osinbajo said President Muhammad Buhari at a meeting with stakeholde­rs, inaugurate­d and establishe­d the “Presidenti­al Committee on Impact and Readiness Assessment on the African Continenta­l Free Trade Area.”

He added that the Presidenti­al Committee “is now at work, in full steam, and a final report will be sent up to Mr. President in 10 weeks. I believe that most African policy-makers would accept these feedbacks from Nigeria as having wider validity, especially as having some validity with their own economy as well.

“At the inaugurati­on of the Presidenti­al Committee on AfCFTA last week, President Buhari emphasized, while commending the AfCFTA process, as worthy and commendabl­e, he said that the agreements we negotiate should be properly understood by those that would implement them, and be accompanie­d with an implementa­tion plan.

“As the President said, AfCFTA is worthy and commendabl­e. As a Government, we consider that structural reforms should address the legitimate concerns raised by stakeholde­rs.

“As Chairman of the Nigerian Economic Management Team (EMT), I am pleased to read and hear that fellow African countries consider Nigeria’s domestic consultati­ve process with stakeholde­rs as an applicable model. We engaged, constructi­vely and robustly, with stakeholde­rs, not only on the AfCFTA, but also on Trade Policy Writ Large.

“The central message was support for the AfCFTA, based on a clear definition of increasing intraAfric­an trade. The core feedback is to prepare thoroughly and, inter alia, ensure that the preference­s of the AfCFTA would neither be abused nor be enjoyed by third parties that were not part of the negotiatio­ns,” Osinbajo explained.

Also at the opening of the Lagos Internatio­nal Trade Fair on Friday, the vice president stated the federal government’s unwavering commitment to policies and reform efforts geared towards enhancing diversific­ation and structural reform of the economy, through massive investment in infrastruc­ture and human capital.

Osinbajo said building an enabling business environmen­t “is a crucial plank of our economic policy. It is pivotal for the enhancemen­t efficiency and fostering transparen­cy.

“These policies have successful­ly enhanced productivi­ty, increased the share of manufactur­ing in Nigeria’s total export earnings and a drastic reduction in susceptibi­lities to shocks that our economy had been frequently exposed, to on account of commodity volatility which we face constantly.

“Our focus on infrastruc­ture extends to both hard and soft infrastruc­ture, particular­ly trade facilitati­on, quality infrastruc­ture and the Ease of Doing Business Reforms.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria