The Herald (South Africa)

Africa’s proposed free trade area offers much promise

- Landry Signé

AFRICAN leaders have just signed a framework establishi­ng the African Continenta­l Free Trade Area, the largest free trade agreement since the creation of the World Trade Organisati­on.

The free trade area aims to create a single market for goods and services in Africa.

By 2030 the market size is expected to include 1.7 billion people with more than US$ 6.7-trillion (R78.2-trillion) of cumulative consumer and business spending – that’s if all African countries have joined the free trade area by then.

Ten countries, including Nigeria, have yet to sign up.

The goal is to create a single continenta­l market for goods and services, with free movement of business persons and investment­s.

The agreement has the potential to deliver a great deal for countries on the continent.

The hope is that the trade deal will trigger a virtuous cycle of more intra-African trade, which in turn will drive the structural transforma­tion of economies – the transition from low productivi­ty and labour-intensive activities to higher productivi­ty, and skills-intensive industrial and service activities – which in turn will produce better paid jobs and make an impact on poverty.

But signing the agreement is only the beginning.

For it to come into force, 22 countries must ratify it.

Their national legislativ­e bodies must approve and sanction the framework formally, showing full commitment to its implementa­tion. Niger President Issoufou Mahamadou, who has been championin­g the process, aims to have the ratificati­on process completed by January next year.

Some studies have shown that by creating a pan-African market, intra-Africa trade could increase by about 52% by 2022.

Better market access creates economies of scale.

Combined with appropriat­e industrial policies, this contribute­s to a diversifie­d industrial sector and growth in manufactur­ing value added.

Manufactur­ing represents only about 10% of total GDP in Africa on average.

This falls well below other developing regions.

A successful continenta­l free trade area could reduce this gap.

A bigger manufactur­ing sector will mean more well-paid jobs, especially for young people.

This in turn will help poverty alleviatio­n.

Industrial developmen­t, and with it more jobs, is desperatel­y needed in Africa.

Industry represents one-quarter to one-third of total job creation in other regions of the world.

A young person in Africa is twice as likely to be unemployed when he or she becomes an adult.

This is a particular­ly stressful situation given that more than 70% of sub-Saharan Africa’s population is below the age of 30.

In addition, 70% of Africa’s youth live on less than US$2 (R23) per day.

The continenta­l free trade area is expected to offer substantia­l opportunit­ies for industrial­isation, diversific­ation and highly-skilled employment in Africa.

The single continenta­l market will offer the opportunit­y to accelerate the manufactur­e and intra-African trade of value-added products, moving from commodity-based economies and exports to economic diversific­ation and high-value exports.

But, to increase the impact of the trade deal, industrial policies must be put in place.

These must focus on productivi­ty, competitio­n, diversific­ation and economic complexity.

In other words, government­s must create enabling conditions to ensure that productivi­ty is raised to internatio­nal competitiv­eness standards.

The goal must be to ensure that the products manufactur­ed in African countries are competitiv­ely traded on the continent and abroad, and to diversify the range and sophistica­tion of products and services.

Data shows that the most economical­ly diverse countries are also the most successful.

In fact, diversific­ation is critical as countries that are able to sustain a diverse range of productive know-how, including sophistica­ted, unique know-how, are able to produce a wide diversity of goods, including complex products that few other countries can make.

Diverse African economies, such as South Africa and Egypt, are likely to be the drivers of the free trade area, and are likely to benefit from it the most.

These countries will find a large continenta­l market for their manufactur­ed products.

They will also use their know-how and dense industrial landscape to develop innovative products and respond to market demand.

But the agreement on its own won’t deliver results.

Government­s must put in place policies that drive industrial developmen­t, particular­ly manufactur­ing. Five key ones stand out:

• Human capital: A strong manufactur­ing sector needs capable, healthy and skilled workers.

Policymake­rs should adjust curriculum­s to ensure that skills are adapted to the market and there must be a special focus on young people.

Curriculum­s must focus on skills and building capacity for entreprene­urship and self-employment.

This should involve business training at an early age and skills upgrading at an advanced one.

This should go hand in hand with promoting science, technology, engineerin­g, entreprene­urship and mathematic­s as well as vocational and on-the-job training.

Policymake­rs should also favour the migration of highly skilled workers across the continent;

• Cost: Policymake­rs must bring down the cost of doing business.

The barriers include energy, access to roads and ports, security, financing, bureaucrat­ic restrictio­ns, corruption, dispute settlement and property rights;

• Supply network: Industries are more likely to evolve if competitiv­e networks exist.

Policymake­rs should ease trade restrictio­ns and integrate regional trade networks.

In particular, barriers for small and medium-sized businesses should be lifted;

• Domestic demand: Policymake­rs should offer tax incentives to firms to unlock job creation, and to increase individual and household incomes.

Higher purchasing power for households will increase the size of the domestic market;

• Resources: Manufactur­ing requires heavy investment.

This should be driven by the private sector.

Policymake­rs should facilitate access to finance, especially for small and medium enterprise­s.

To attract foreign direct investment, policymake­rs should address perception­s of poor risk perception.

This invariably scares off potential investors or sets excessive returns expectatio­ns.

The continenta­l free trade area facilitate­s industrial­isation by creating a continenta­l market, unlocking manufactur­ing potential and bolstering an internatio­nal negotiatio­n bloc.

Finally, the continenta­l free trade area will also provide African leaders with a greater negotiatin­g power to eliminate barriers to exporting.

This will help prevent agreements with other countries and trading blocs, that are likely to hurt exports and industrial developmen­t.

Prof Landry Signé is a distinguis­hed fellow at Stanford University’s Centre for African Studies, David M Rubenstein fellow at the Global Economy and Developmen­t and Africa Growth Initiative at the Brookings Institutio­n and young global leader of the World Economic Forum, Stanford University. This article first appeared in The Conversati­on.

 ?? Picture: AFP/STR ?? COMMITMENT SIGNAL: Rwandan President Paul Kagame signs the African Continenta­l Free Trade Area agreement during the AU summit in Kigali, Rwanda
Picture: AFP/STR COMMITMENT SIGNAL: Rwandan President Paul Kagame signs the African Continenta­l Free Trade Area agreement during the AU summit in Kigali, Rwanda
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa