Mail & Guardian

Continent’s free-trade fairy tale

The agreement is a major achievemen­t but there are many hurdles to jump before it becomes reality

- Simon Allison

Across-section of Africa’s most powerful people gathered in Kigali this week to sell a dream — and sell it

hard.

Rwandan President Paul Kagame, who revelled in his role as host of this extraordin­ary African Union summit, described this dream as “among the most consequent­ial actions that this assembly has ever taken”.

Former Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo said that anyone who did not support it was a “criminal”. President Cyril Ramaphosa invoked not one but three liberation heroes to underscore the significan­ce of the moment.

“This is probably just as important as the formation of the Organisati­on of African Unity. This is what Kwame Nkrumah dreamt of, what Julius Nyerere wanted to see, what Nelson Mandela wanted to see realised. It’s truly a new dawn for Africa,” he said.

The presidents were speaking about the signing of the African Continenta­l Free Trade Agreement, a landmark deal that would create a single market from the Cape to Cairo and from Djibouti to Dakar.

On Wednesday, 44 African countries committed themselves to eliminatin­g cross-border tariffs and making border posts more efficient. Twenty-seven countries signed an additional protocol to allow for the free movement of people across those borders.

If fully realised, this agreement would revolution­ise trade in Africa. For the first time, Kenyan manufactur­ers would be able to sell their products in Nigeria without paying tax at every border crossing, a Ghanaian PR firm could open an office in Namibia without going through any regulatory hoops, and all African citizens would have the right to live and work in any African country. “The border gates are now going to fall apart,” Ramaphosa said.

Better together

The dream of continenta­l integratio­n has long been a cornerston­e of the AU, and the OAU before it. The AU’s long-term strategy document, Agenda 2063, paints a utopian vision of a continent in effect without borders, where citizens travel on an African passport and spend their Afros, the proposed single currency.

The logic is simple: if Africa wants to compete economical­ly with the big players, it must play as a team. Africa’s entire population is roughly the size of India’s but Africa is 55 countries, with 55-odd currencies and 55 regulatory environmen­ts and 55 sets of red tape. Doing business on the continent is a nightmare, both for foreign investors and for African businesses that want to expand.

It’s easier for African businesses to trade outside the continent. The statistics don’t lie: as of 2016, intra-African trade accounted for just 17.6% of Africa’s total exports. In Europe that figure is 70%. “Economic integratio­n thus responds not only to aspiration­s born out of Pan-Africanism, but also to a practical imperative linked to the economic viability of the continent,” said Moussa Faki Mahamat, the chairperso­n of the AU Commission. “Our peoples, our business community and our youth, in particular, cannot wait any longer to see the lifting of the barriers that divide our continent, hinder its economic take-off and perpetuate misery, even though Africa is abundantly endowed with wealth.”

But Mahamat, who replaced Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma last year, also sounded a note of caution. He is more familiar than most with the disconnect between the AU’s noble ideals and its no-can-do record for implementa­tion — and he knows that the continenta­l free trade dream is still some distance from becoming reality. He pleaded with his fellow leaders to prove the doubters wrong this time.

“Some actors, but also our own peoples, have seen so many proclamati­ons remain a dead letter, so many commitment­s without practical execution, that they have come to doubt the strength of our commitment. This summit must, therefore, mark a break … It must confound those who, outside Africa, continue to think, with barely concealed condescens­ion, that our decisions will never materialis­e,” Mahamat said.

Unfair trade?

The obstacles to a full, continentw­ide implementa­tion of the free trade area are large and many. The most serious, for now, is the reluctance of Nigeria, the continent’s biggest economy, to join the club.

President Muhammadu Buhari very nearly signed on the dotted line. Summit gossip had it that he was on his way to the airport in Abuja when he abruptly cancelled his trip, apparently swayed at the last minute by vocal opposition from trade unions, a constituen­cy he cannot afford to alienate in the run-up to next year’s elections.

“We at the Nigeria Labour Congress are shocked by the sheer impunity or blatant lack of consultati­on in the process that has led to this,” said Ayuba Wabba, who heads the labour movement.

“We have no doubt this policy initiative will spell the death knell of the Nigerian economy.”

These fears are not unfounded. Although all economists seem united in predicting that greater economic integratio­n will lead to greater prosperity — potentiall­y increasing intraAfric­an trade by 52% in the next four years — there may also be a shake-up of the establishe­d economic order. Although the continent as a whole will win, there will be individual­s, companies and maybe even countries that will lose out in the short to medium term. Persuading them to act for the greater good regardless of the personal cost will be a major political challenge.

Another is to get the free trade agreement ratified. It now goes to parliament­s that must rubber-stamp the text, a process that could take years. The bureaucrat­ic hurdles have already claimed a major scalp: South Africa, which in Ramaphosa has one of the agreement’s most vocal cheerleade­rs, did not actually sign the agreement. He said, although he was committed to doing so, legally local stakeholde­rs had to be consulted first.

But even should all this red tape be cleared, more torturous negotiatio­ns lie ahead. As much as African leaders deserve credit for taking just two years to thrash out this agreement to make the self-imposed deadline — encouraged by Kagame, who was desperate to conclude the deal during his term as AU chairperso­n — they postponed dealing with some of the most contentiou­s issues.

The protocols on competitio­n and intellectu­al policy have yet to be agreed upon, and there is no accord on rules of origin, the criteria to determine where a product is actually from.

These are usually among the most contentiou­s issues of any free trade negotiatio­n, so expect many disagreeme­nts to come.

For all the fine words and noble ideals expressed at the Kigali summit, and for all the undoubted progress that has been made, a fully functional African Continenta­l Free Trade Area is still many years — and many compromise­s — away.

So put away your Afros, because you won’t be spending them yet. And don’t bank on borders disappeari­ng soon.

 ??  ?? Continent without borders: President Cyril Ramaphosa (right) endorsed the trade agreement that does away with cross-boundary tariffs and the free movement of people within Africa. But realising this dream will be a slow process with many hurdles....
Continent without borders: President Cyril Ramaphosa (right) endorsed the trade agreement that does away with cross-boundary tariffs and the free movement of people within Africa. But realising this dream will be a slow process with many hurdles....

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa