Business Weekly (Zimbabwe)

New era for global business, investment in Africa

- This article is part of the World Economic Forum’s Annual Meeting 2023. CNBC Africa

AT a time of multiple, overlappin­g global challenges — from climate change to energy shocks to rising inflation and a cost-of-living crisis — the Africa Continenta­l Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) offers promise not only for the region but for the world.

The AfCFTA, establishe­d in 2018, will create the world’s largest free trade area, bringing transforma­tive change and tremendous opportunit­y to African economies and business environmen­ts. Its adoption and implementa­tion will accelerate intra-African trade and develop regional and local value chains, creating new business dynamics that offer investors access to a population of 1,7 billion people with combined business and consumer spending reaching US$6,7 billion by 2030.

Global businesses have an important role to play in accelerati­ng the implementa­tion of the AfCFTA, according to a new report from the World Economic Forum, in collaborat­ion with the AfCFTA Secretaria­t and Forum partners. The report outlines high-potential sectors, initiative­s to support business and investment, operationa­l tools to facilitate the AfCFTA, and illustrati­ve examples from successful businesses in

Africa to guide businesses in successful­ly entering and expanding in this area.

The AfCFTA Secretaria­t selected four key sectors that represent high-potential opportunit­ies for companies looking to invest in Africa: the automotive industry, agricultur­e and agro-processing, pharmaceut­icals, and transporta­tion and logistics. These four sectors are expected to see rapid accelerati­on in production and trade volumes under the AfCFTA, given that they have a high potential to meet local demand with local production. Until now, local demand for these goods and services is currently being met through relatively high-cost imports, despite the region’s growing and lower cost production capabiliti­es.

While the AfCFTA offers business opportunit­ies in each of these four sectors, companies will also need to understand how the changing environmen­ts under the trade agreement will affect their strategies for success in the region.

The World Economic Forum is actively working toward implementi­ng trade and investment tools that are aligned with the negotiatio­n process of the AfCFTA by identifyin­g areas where public-private collaborat­ion can help reduce barriers and facilitate investment from internatio­nal firms.

For example, public-private collaborat­ion centred around implementi­ng AfCFTA trade-facilitati­ng provisions can facilitate trade in goods, on-the-ground initiative­s can address fragmented investment regulatory frameworks, and bringing together groups committed to 4IR technology, digital payments, and informatio­n exchanges can support digital trade.

To improve the societal outcomes of trade, the Forum’s Inclusive Trade Initiative is uncovering best practices that can be shared with AfCFTA negotiator­s and businesses. And an inventory of 25 key climate technologi­es and with country-specific studies helps identify opportunit­ies for trade to align with circular economy goals.

Companies can also look to five new operationa­l tools as they adjust to the changing dynamics under the trade agreement.

The AfCFTA Guided Trade Initiative has facilitate­d the start of trade in eight countries for 96 products, providing support and guidance on customs clearing and while gathering informatio­n on how to make the process more efficient for the private sector.

The Pan-African Payment and Settlement

System enables users to make near-instant payments in their local currency without needing to convert to a foreign currency or use a third-party institutio­n.

The AfCFTA Adjustment Facility Fund is a combinatio­n of a base fund, general fund, and credit fund, that assists government­s and the private sector in addressing short-term disruption­s through financing, technical assistance, and grants and compensati­on funding.

The AfCFTA Private Engagement Strategy helps companies to better understand the overall continenta­l strategy as well as the specific initiative­s and policy recommenda­tions in emerging sectors that the AfCFTA is prioritisi­ng.

And the Rules of Origin Manual & E-Tariff Book sets the guidelines for the rules

and procedures for determinin­g the origin status of goods and makes informatio­n on duty rates easily searchable and comparable.

In addition, analysis of on-the-ground experience from companies including Agility, AFC, Coca-Cola, DP World, Menzies, Novartis, OCP, UBA, Volkswagen, and Yara, has revealed three main strategies that have led to success in Africa and can provide invaluable lessons to companies planning to seize the opportunit­ies opened by the trade agreement.

The first strategy is to form local partnershi­ps with government­s, local institutio­ns, universiti­es and others to create regional hubs and host R&D at local universiti­es. The second strategy is to leverage key trade accelerato­rs such as investing in local infrastruc­ture and logistics, with opportunit­ies ranging from food storage to partnering with local organisati­ons to move various parts of the value chain onto the continent. The third strategy is to form integrated ecosystems by developing endto-end value chains around local resources, which de-risks projects and creates an environmen­t where shared infrastruc­ture can support multiple projects in different sectors.

The global private sector must be prepared for the changes in trade dynamics ahead on the continent to seize the opportunit­ies that the AfCFTA brings, achieving business success while helping to usher in a new era of economic developmen­t.

 ?? ?? Chido Munyati, Head of Regional Agenda, Africa, World Economic Forum
Chido Munyati, Head of Regional Agenda, Africa, World Economic Forum

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