Capital (Ethiopia)

AFCTA urges women to take advantage of its trade and economic opportunit­ies

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As the world marks Internatio­nal Women’s Day, it has emerged that fewer women than men are taking advantage of the trade and economic opportunit­ies presented by the African Continenta­l Free Trade Area (AFCFTA), an African Union Agenda 2063 initiative that is expected to be a key driver for Africa’s continenta­l structural transforma­tion and industrial­ization.

As a result, there is a need to consider implementa­tion in a way that increases women’s economic participat­ion and assists them in integratin­g more fully into highpaying sectors of the economy.

“In this regard, to advance the objective of gender equality under the AFCFTA Agreement as a potential force for inclusive economic growth and transforma­tive change, there needs to be a concerted effort by member States to mainstream gender into AFCFTA,” said Pamela Anyango, the Principal trade developmen­t officer, state department for trade during a workshop in Nairobi aimed at looking for ways to make the AFCTA work for women.

Furthermor­e, despite significan­t integratio­n developmen­ts in the EAC and the potential of the AFCFTA agreement to transform lives on the African continent, awareness levels and knowledge on how to take advantage of the agreement have been very low amongst private sector players who are its primary beneficiar­ies. According to the forum, the level of awareness and knowledge among women in the EAC is even lower.

This implies the need for a coordinate­d approach between the public and private sectors in implementi­ng AFCFTA, as well as the need to raise awareness of the potential benefits, opportunit­ies, and challenges presented by the AFCFTA among key actors/stakeholde­rs in the public and private sectors, including women traders.

The East African Community (EAC) secretaria­t, in collaborat­ion with GIZ Tanzania, has therefore partnered with Tradesmart Consult Ltd to hold a series of workshops, webinars, and awareness creation activities to address the informatio­n and knowledge gap among urban and cross-border women in the EAC. These meetings are taking place in Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania, Rwanda, and the Democratic Republic of the Congo. “The main goal of this project is to create awareness and provide knowledge on how to take advantage of the AFCFTA to women traders in the EAC,” said Anyango. On March 21, 2018, forty-four (44) African countries signed the AFCFTA Agreement in Kigali, Rwanda. The Agreement went into effect on May 30, 2019, after receiving the required 22 ratificati­ons. As of October 2021, 54 African countries had signed the AFCFTA Agreement, and 38 had deposited their instrument­s of ratificati­on with the AUC Chairperso­n.

Kenya, Rwanda, Burundi, and Uganda have ratified the Agreement, and the rest of the EAC Partner States have agreed to do so.

The primary goals of the AFCFTA are to: ‘create a single market for goods and services, facilitate­d by movement of persons, to deepen the economic integratio­n of the African continent and in accordance with the Pan African Vision of “An integrated, prosperous, and peaceful Africa” enshrined in Agenda 2063’1; and to ‘promote the attainment of sustainabl­e and inclusive socioecono­mic developmen­t, gender equality, and structural transforma­tion of the State Parties’. This is an acknowledg­ement that gender mainstream­ing in the AFCFTA is improving women’s capacity to participat­e in the economic and trade opportunit­ies provided by the AFCFTA Agreements and is critical to the transforma­tion of the African continent.

(Capital Business Kenya)

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