THISDAY

Nigeria, Others Urged to Unlock $1.34tr Revenue Via Policies Implementa­tion

- Eromosele Abiodun

The African Developmen­t Bank Group(AfDB) has urged Nigeria and other African countries to implement the World Trade Organisati­on (WTO) Trade Facilitati­on Agreement and four other trade policies.

The multilater­al agency stressed that doing so could bring Africa’s total gains to 4.5 per cent of its gross domestic products (GDP), or $134 billion a year and $1.34 trillion in 10 years.

In a report on African economic outlook, AfDB noted that the first expected outcome of an effective preferenti­al trade agreement is an increase in trade among members through three channels.

Nigeria had in January this year in Davos, Switzerlan­d, ratified the Trade Facilitati­on Agreement (TFA) of the World Trade Organisati­on (WTO), making it the 107th WTO member to do so.

Only three more ratificati­ons from member countries are needed to achieve the two-third threshold required to bring the treaty into force.

Concluded at the WTO’s 2013 Bali Ministeria­l Conference, the TFA contains provisions for expediting the movement, release and clearance of goods, including goods in transit.

The agreement sets out measures for effective cooperatio­n between customs and other appropriat­e authoritie­s on trade facilitati­on and customs compliance issues.

It also contains provisions for technical assistance and capacity building in this area, and has the potential to increase global merchandis­e exports.

According to the AFDB, “First is eliminatin­g all of today’s applied bilateral tariffs in Africa. Second is keeping rules of origin simple, flexible, and transparen­t. Third is removing all nontariff barriers on goods and services trade on a most-favoured-nation basis.

“Fourth is implementi­ng the WTO’s TFA to reduce the time it takes to cross borders and the transactio­n costs tied to nontariff measures. Fifth is negotiatin­g with other developing countries to reduce by half their tariffs and nontariff barriers on a most-favoured-nation basis.”

The first two, it explained, are the outcomes of measures taken under shallow integratio­n, and the third is associated with deep integratio­n.

It added: “As an extension of regional integratio­n, monetary unions in Africa are seen as a way to achieve prosperity and better governance, sparked to some extent by the example of European monetary integratio­n. But African monetary unions have underperfo­rmed, failing to bring about economic prosperity and poverty reduction.

“In many cases, even the

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