The Herald (Zimbabwe)

‘Boost production to take advantage of AfCFTA’

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MANY African countries — including Zimbabwe — have pinned their hopes for economic revival on the African Continenta­l Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) agreement that came into force on January 1, 2021.

The AfCFTA — which was initially set to commence on July 1, 2020 but delayed due to the coronaviru­s — seeks to boost intra-Africa trade.

As of December 2020, 54 countries had signed the agreement, while 34 countries have deposited their instrument­s of ratificati­on, according to Wamkele Mene, the AfCFTA secretary general.

If implemente­d fully, the trade pact could boost regional income by 7 percent or US$450 billion, speed up wage growth for women, and lift 30 million people out of extreme poverty by 2035, according to the World Bank.

A report from the World Bank shows that Zimbabwe and Côte d’Ivoire — where trade costs are among the continent’s highest — would see the biggest gains of the AfCFTA, with each increasing income by 14 percent.

But economists argue Zimbabwe needs to put its house in order first for it to benefit.

Zimbabwe used to have a robust manufactur­ing sector, which would have put it first in the queue of countries that could benefit from the AfCFTA.

Decades of mismanagem­ent, however, have created an economy of importers rather than producers.

The Southern African country relies on imports of nearly everything from furniture, chemicals, clothing to even toothpicks from its neighbouri­ng country South Africa and China.

Lack of productivi­ty and competitiv­eness

Mr Prosper Chitambara, an economist in Harare, says that Zimbabwe will not immediatel­y benefit from the trade pact.

“We have low capacity in all key sectors of the economy and in particular the agricultur­al and the manufactur­ing sectors. (Our) competitiv­eness and productivi­ty gap is huge and this renders us incapable of competing with the rest of the African nations,” he says.

He adds that the country needs to strengthen the industrial sector and address challenges in the agricultur­al sector.

“We need to increase investment in critical productivi­ty enhancemen­t sectors like in infrastruc­ture and in particular irrigation, as well as transport and energy infrastruc­ture. These are the key enablers to unlock value within agricultur­e, industry and the rest of the economy,” mr Chitambara explains.

Economist Mr Victor Bhoroma says Zimbabwe’s exports are mostly raw materials and that local industries are not competitiv­e regionally.

Manufactur­ing’s discontent­s

“Zimbabwe’s low manufactur­ing capacity utilisatio­n means that local industries cannot compete with regional peers such as those from Zambia, South

Africa, Angola and Namibia that have enjoyed longer periods of economic and currency stability, and policy consistenc­y,” he explains.

Mr Bhoroma says the major setbacks for Zimbabwe to benefit from the trade pact include low industrial capacity utilisatio­n, high cost of doing business and complex taxation procedures, policy inconsiste­ncy — especially on monetary reforms — inefficien­t foreign exchange policies and porous borders that make it hard to prevent smuggling.

“(There is need to) implement a market determined managed float exchange rate to remove arbitrage opportunit­ies that threaten primary production locally in favour of importing finished products,” he says.

“Monetary policy consistenc­y is key to stable production and export capacity.”

Zimbabwe National Chamber of Commerce (ZNCC) president Mr Tinashe Manzungu says for liberalisa­tion of trade to bear fruit, African states must overcome the trade constraint­s.

“These supply constraint­s include weak infrastruc­ture (and) time consumed procedures at customs borders,” he explains.

Creating opportunit­y

The AfCFTA offers Zimbabwe’s an opportunit­y to recover from the economic turmoil caused by the coronaviru­s.

Zimbabwe’s economy shrank by more than 6 percent in 2019. Mr Manzungu says that while the global economy is in turmoil due to the Covid-19, the creation of a vast regional market will help Zimbabwe diversify its exports, accelerate growth and attract foreign direct investment.

Confederat­ion of Zimbabwe Industries president Mr Henry Ruzvidzo says the AfCFTA will encourage inter-Africa trade, which is low at the moment.

“We have the opportunit­y to leverage on our location, resource endowments and considerab­le manufactur­ing experience and know-how to get a head start in the race,” he says.

Ms Constance Chemwayi, a ministry of foreign affairs and internatio­nal trade spokespers­on, tells

The Africa Report that Zimbabwe is preparing tariff offers to submit to the AfCFTA secretaria­t in order to operationa­lise the trade pact.

She said these will show the preferenti­al tariffs to be applied on imports coming from the continent, with the aim of eventually eliminatin­g the tariffs.

Tariff preparatio­ns

Ms Chemwayi says that once Zimbabwe submits the tariff offers and they are subsequent­ly gazetted, the potential benefits include access to export and import markets at reduced preferenti­al customs duties for products with agreed rules of origin from the continent.

“The preferenti­al duties will be favourable as compared to the most-favoured-nation duties, which are payable by countries not party to the AfCFTA,” she adds. While there is a need to boost local industries so that we can fully benefit from the agreement, the Government is working to create a conducive environmen­t for business to take advantage of the AfCFTA.” -The Africa Report.

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