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The Key to Unlocking Africa’s Economic Potential

- By Landry Signé

Africa is on the cusp of an economic transforma­tion. By 2050, consumer and business spending on the continent is expected to reach roughly $16.1 trillion. The coming boom offers tremendous opportunit­ies for global businesses – especially US companies looking for new markets. But unless African policymake­rs remove existing barriers to regional trade and investment, the continent’s economy will struggle to reach its true potential.

Two major trade agreements – the African Growth and Opportunit­y Act (AGOA) and the African Continenta­l Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) – will make it easier for African countries to trade with one another, and with the United States. Together, the agreements promise to remove longstandi­ng impediment­s to industrial­ization.

AGOA, passed by the US Congress in 2000, gives countries in Sub-Saharan Africa preferenti­al trade access, allowing them to export tariff-free products to the US. Although it will expire in 2025, US President Joe Biden’s Sub-Saharan Africa strategy, unveiled in August, highlights its positive impact and promises to work with Congress on ways to proceed after AGOA lapses.

AfCFTA, on the other hand, is an intra-African trade agreement with no expiration date. Establishe­d in 2018, its goal is to deepen trade ties between African countries by removing tariff and non-tariff barriers.

Although these agreements’ scope, focus, beneficiar­ies, and structure differ significan­tly from each other, they are essential to strengthen­ing African regional integratio­n. Rather than viewing them as separate or competing agreements, policymake­rs and investors should recognize how they can complement each other in creating, sustaining, and transformi­ng value chains across the continent.

Value creation is critical to Africa’s economic transforma­tion. In 2014, manufactur­ed goods accounted for about 41.9% of the trade between African countries, compared to 14.8% of their exports to the rest of the world. Greater regional integratio­n will provide Africa with a larger supply market, which will accelerate manufactur­ing specializa­tion and make African producers more competitiv­e globally.

More robust manufactur­ing industries will provide jobs for low-skilled workers – particular­ly those not currently integrated into the formal economy. This, in turn, will increase average household incomes, boost domestic demand, spur innovation and diversific­ation, and help protect local economies against external shocks.

AGOA has already created some opportunit­ies for crossborde­r value chains. Yet despite some success stories like Madagascar’s apparel industry, which relies on an extensive regional supply chain, such opportunit­ies remain limited. While integratio­n has improved since AGOA’s implementa­tion, particular­ly since 2015, it remains somewhat superficia­l: less than 17% of Africa’s commercial value is currently

generated through intraAfric­an trade.

The real game changer is the AfCFTA. By removing tariffs for a wide range of products across the continent, it will lower production costs and shift foreign direct investment toward manufactur­ed goods, while also reducing transit costs and shortening supply chains – major benefits in a globalized economy.

The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund projects that, under the AfCFTA, Africa’s expanded goods and labor markets will become more efficient, driving a significan­t increase in African countries’ competitiv­eness. By creating a true continenta­l market that increases intra-African trade and impels African countries to participat­e in “production sharing” at a higher rate, the AfCFTA will likely provide a further incentive to US-based multinatio­nals, which will be able to access a larger market and establish a major global hub. AGOA has already spurred many companies to invest in Africa, and the successful implementa­tion of the AfCFTA will strengthen this trend.

The challenge for policymake­rs is to accelerate this process and ensure that the two programs complement each other. One way to do this is to deepen and broaden communicat­ion channels between Africa and the US, making it easier for investors interested in doing business in Africa to be better prepared for the expected growth in demand for regionally-sourced products. Supporting individual countries in implementi­ng the AfCFTA would also help streamline the process.

A key problem that remains to be addressed is AGOA’s eligibilit­y criteria, which are set on a country-by-country basis. These criteria can be detrimenta­l to regional integratio­n, as one country’s removal could affect another country’s supply inputs, thereby creating a ripple effect. For example, when Madagascar was removed from the AGOA-eligible list in 2010 following a coup d’état, the five African countries from which it had been sourcing apparel inputs were also punished. Considerin­g the broader effect of country-specific sanctions will help prevent unintended investor risk.

Effective regional integratio­n is essential for Africa. Without it, the continent will continue to be overlooked and outpaced globally in manufactur­ing, informatio­n technologi­es, and agricultur­e. When considerin­g the future configurat­ion of both AGOA and the AfCFTA, policymake­rs should regard them as complement­ary mechanisms for ensuring Africa’s long-term economic developmen­t.

Landry Signé, a professor and executive director at Thunderbir­d School of Global Management at Arizona State University in Washington, DC, is a senior fellow at the Brookings Institutio­n and a distinguis­hed fellow at Stanford University. Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2022. www.project-syndicate. org

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