Capital (Ethiopia)

Activists call for fairer terms at EU-AU summit

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The sixth Europe-africa summit taking place in Brussels, Belgium, this week risks entrenchin­g inequality between the two continents unless deliberate steps are taken to rebalance relations, civil society activists have warned.

In a two-day webinar ahead of the EUAU summit, activists heard that key priorities for Africa, including debt relief and progressiv­e trade rules, are unlikely to be met under the current negotiatio­n framework.

Jane Nalunga, an expert with Seatini, an NGO which works to promote fairtrade in Eastern and Southern Africa, accused the EU of “balkanisat­ion” by “forcing” individual African countries to sign bilateral Economic Partnershi­p Agreements (EPA).

These EPAS, she said, undermine the African Continenta­l Free Trade Agreement (ACFTA) which came into effect in 2021 but is yet to fully get off the ground. She cited an example of the East African Community where, instead of negotiatin­g with the regional trade bloc, the EU had strong-armed first Kenya, and then Tanzania, to sign bilateral EPAS with it. With its two largest economies already in hook with the EU, EAC member states are unable to collective­ly negotiate better terms, Ms Naluga said.

Part of the problem, according to Dr Chiek Tidiane Dieye, the founder and executive director of the African Centre for Trade, Integratio­n and Developmen­t, is that the AU teams often lack a coherent set of minimum economic positions during negotiatio­ns.

Unlike the EU where the political project followed economic integratio­n, the ACFTA is coming more than half a century after the Organisati­on of African Union, the precursor to the AU, she noted. The lack of a strong united bargaining position makes Africa vulnerable to poor deals and changes in agreed positions, she noted.

For illustrati­on, she noted that aid promises made by the developing world to the continent had been diverted to Covid vaccines, often at higher price points, reducing financial inflows into Africa. This could worsen the debt situation on the continent where about 16 countries in sub-saharan Africa have issued $137 billion in Eurobonds, and where about $40 billion in debt repayment is due in the near term.

Daniel Bradlow, a professor of internatio­nal developmen­t law and African economic relations at the University of Pretoria said during the webinar that the multilater­al nature of Africa’s debt, including commercial lenders and nonparis Club lenders like China, made negotiatio­ns for relief more complicate­d. “Unfortunat­ely there is no internatio­nal framework for renegotiat­ing commercial debt so it is voluntary and unpredicta­ble,” he said. “You have to get everybody to agree.”

He added that while African countries should, ideally, be negotiatin­g as a collective, many put sovereignt­y ahead of unity, underminin­g their ability to get better terms.

Prof Bradlow noted that traditiona­l approaches of asking for debt relief and debt cancellati­on of the continent’s debt stock of $700 billion might not meet the continent’s financing needs, which include $300 billion a year to invest in meeting climate change and sustainabl­e developmen­t goals of addressing poverty and inequality.

Alternativ­e strategies, Prof Bradlow said, include “shaking up dynamics on the creditor side, especially bondholder­s” by setting up funds to buy up the debts of vulnerable economies to de-risk them and reduce the cost of finance, pegged to guarantees, including in the use of debt proceeds. Some of the issues that civil society activists said the summit in Brussels should focus sharply on include more equitable distributi­on of Covid-19 vaccines, more progressiv­e policies on migration, as well as peace and security arrangemen­ts which prioritise the interests of African citizens, not those of African leaders and their western allies.

Covid-19 has posed unpreceden­ted challenges, with countries diverting reserves, delaying repayments or borrowing to respond to the pandemic.

“This vicious cycle-debt leading to default leading to draconian cuts in public services leading to more debt-has laid bare the dysfunctio­n and injustice of the current global financial architectu­re,” a briefing paper released ahead of last week’s webinar said.

Civil society actors say the global response to the pandemic has exposed the inequaliti­es in the AU-EU partnershi­p. They accuse European countries of hoarding and failing to deliver on promised vaccines, as well as blocking the suspension of intellectu­al property rules to allow developing countries to manufactur­e the vaccines themselves. They add that the G20 Debt Service Suspension Initiative, designed to free up cash in developing countries to fight Covid-19, which ended in December 2021, was “inadequate and short-term”, with only about $33 billion of around $650 billion in additional special drawing rights allocated by the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund coming to Africa. “The upcoming summit thus avails us the opportunit­y to engage on debt and economic recovery for all our citizens, especially the most vulnerable (women, children and youth). It also focuses the AU and the EU on prioritisi­ng policies with impact on lives and livelihood­s, health, access to vaccines, reinvestme­nts in health infrastruc­ture, education, energy and the economies of member states from the two continents,” the civil society activists said.

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