The Citizen (Gauteng)

African execs urged free-trade deal to fight virus

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The delayed implementa­tion of an African free-trade agreement is a missed opportunit­y as the pact offers “probably the best form of stimulus” for the continent to overcome the impact of the coronaviru­s pandemic, according to an enterprise that liaises between business and the African Union.

“We unfortunat­ely don’t have the ability to play with quantitati­ve easing and the exercise of printing money,” Paulo Gomes, the vice president of the AfroChampi­ons Initiative, said in an interview. “Our stimulus is really to enhance trade among the countries and create the conditions to create jobs, develop small and medium enterprise­s and make sure that we create liquidity in the market.”

Gomes, a former executive director of the World Bank, is one of 25 African business leaders, including Gervais Djondo, the co-founder of Ecobank Transnatio­nal, and Ichor Coal chief executive officer Nonkululek­o Nyembezi-Heita, who wrote an open letter to the continent’s political leaders. In it, they warn that the postponeme­nt of trade under the African Continenta­l Free Area would be a mistake.

First trade under the agreement, which was due to take place on 1 July, has been delayed due to the coronaviru­s pandemic. While the agreement entered into force legally last year, protocols for trade in goods and services need to be agreed to make the July deadline.

Instead of a full-blown postponeme­nt, countries should work to facilitate the transport of medical and personal protective equipment as an immediate response to the virus, while concluding outstandin­g negotiatio­ns via virtual meetings, Gomes said.

The health and economic consequenc­es of the virus will result in sub-Saharan Africa’s first recession in 25 years, according to World Bank estimates. African finance ministers have called for emergency economic stimulus of $100 billion (about R1.8 trillion), including debt-service waivers to combat the effects of the pandemic.

The trade pact would cover a market of 1.2 billion people with a combined gross domestic product of $2.5 trillion, making it the world’s largest free-trade zone. – Bloomberg

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