Daily Trust Sunday

Reaping the benefits of African economic integratio­n

- By Célestin Monga Célestin Monga is Vice President and Chief Economist of the African Developmen­t Bank Group.

WWhen Kwame Nkrumah, under whose leadership Ghana became the first African country to claim independen­ce in 1957, was overthrown by a military coup in 1966, few of his fellow citizens shed a tear for his regime. But one aspect of his legacy remains relevant to this day and merits careful considerat­ion.

Nkrumah was a visionary and charismati­c leader whose focus was on modernizin­g Ghana and on campaignin­g for Africa’s political unity. His most brilliant idea was to integrate the continent and create the United States of Africa. But he favored the developmen­t of costly, capitalint­ensive projects, which led to unsustaina­ble foreign debt and deficits while creating few employment opportunit­ies. Economic contractio­n led to widespread unrest and to a loss of credibilit­y for the idea of African integratio­n, and to a fallout with his famous economic adviser, the future Nobel laureate W. Arthur Lewis.

Nkrumah’s intuition about the potential benefits of Africa’s integratio­n was based on a sound economic rationale, which he failed to articulate convincing­ly. With 16 landlocked countries, Africa is more fragmented than any other continent. The small size of many countries and the resulting fragmentat­ion of domestic markets result in various diseconomi­es of scale, impeding economic developmen­t. In 2017, more than three-quarters of African countries had fewer than 30 million people, and about half had a GDP of less than $10 billion.

After Nkrumah’s fall from power, other African leaders took up his goal of building the United States of Africa, based on the Organizati­on of African Unity. The OAU subsequent­ly adopted a series of treaties to make economic integratio­n a reality. The African Economic Community was created in 1991, and, after the OAU was disbanded in 2002, leaders adopted the African Union Agenda 2063 in 2015. The continent’s leaders also created a large number of regional institutio­ns to make incrementa­l progress toward Nkrumah’s goal.

Unfortunat­ely, overlappin­g and often contradict­ory regional economic communitie­s have constitute­d a mostly ineffectiv­e “Spaghetti bowl” of institutio­ns with little authority and weak analytical capacity. This has made African integratio­n sound like an empty political promise used by leaders who have little will to make it happen.

Moreover, researcher­s have cast doubt on the goal of integratio­n. All African economies combined still represent only about 3% of global GDP, and purchasing power remains low. Why, then, devote limited financial resources to building costly infrastruc­ture aimed at integratin­g the continent? While creating a single African market is a desirable goal, pursuing it must not distract national policymake­rs’ attention from the huge potential gains to be had from integratio­n into the global economy.

A new study from the African Developmen­t Bank provides evidence that both objectives are not mutually exclusive; in fact, they could

The economic rationale for Nkrumah’s dream was stronger than previously thought. The adoption of the African Continenta­l Free Trade Area by African leaders in 2018 is giving it new momentum. With the right balance of audacity and pragmatism, regional integratio­n could yield large dividends for Africa and the world alike

be mutually reinforcin­g. The report also examines the potential gains from regional public goods, such as synchroniz­ing financial governance frameworks, pooling power, opening skies to competitio­n, and opening borders to free movement of people, goods, and services.

The study shows that a borderless continent that enables agricultur­al and industrial production across national boundaries is the foundation of a globally competitiv­e African market, because it would offer economies of scale to investors, while creating much bigger markets and providing new opportunit­ies for small firms and large. It would also help eliminate monopoly positions and enhance cross-border spillovers between coastal and landlocked countries.

Moreover, integratio­n can improve regional security, because the expansion of internatio­nal trade often correlates with a reduction of conflict. Deeper market integratio­n for goods, infrastruc­ture services, and key factors of production (labor and capital) is especially important – both economical­ly and strategica­lly – for Africa’s small and fragmented economies.

In a world where 60% of trade occurs through global value chains, Africa must industrial­ize to diversify away from natural resources and create jobs for its fast-growing young population. By boosting intra-continenta­l trade, consumptio­n, and investment, regional integratio­n can be a strong vector for improving productivi­ty, building manufactur­ing powerhouse­s, and developing credible African brands. Open regionalis­m could also stimulate connection­s between small and medium-size enterprise­s and internatio­nal value chains, thereby enabling these firms to enter global markets.

In particular, five trade measures could bring total gains worth 4.5% of Africa’s GDP, or $134 billion a year – almost the amount of all official developmen­t aid in 2017. The first is eliminatio­n of all bilateral tariffs. Second, country-of-origin rules (needed to determine the source of a product) should be kept simple, flexible, and transparen­t. Third, all nontariff barriers on trade of goods and services should be removed on a most-favored-nation basis. Fourth, the World Trade Organizati­on’s Trade Facilitati­on Agreement should be implemente­d to reduce the time it takes to cross borders and the transactio­n costs associated with nontariff measures. Lastly, tariffs and nontariff barriers applied to trade with other developing countries should be reduced by half on a most-favored-nation basis.

The economic rationale for Nkrumah’s dream was stronger than previously thought. The adoption of the African Continenta­l Free Trade Area by African leaders in 2018 is giving it new momentum. With the right balance of audacity and pragmatism, regional integratio­n could yield large dividends for Africa and the world alike.

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