Daily Trust

AfCFTA: Nigeria can ban 10% of sensitive goods, others at borders

- By Sunday Michael Ogwu (Lagos) & Francis Arinze Iloani (Abuja)

In spite of the African Continenta­l Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) starting in January, Nigeria has the right to restrict import of seven per cent of goods considered as sensitive for 10 years when the land borders reopen.

The free trade pact also permits Nigeria to permanentl­y deny tariff liberaliza­tion of three per cent of other goods from being imported.

Daily Trust learnt that the Nigerian Office for Trade Negotiatio­ns (NOTN) is still negotiatin­g the products/ goods to be designated as sensitive and the ones to be permanentl­y excluded from liberalisa­tion when the AfCFTA begins.

The Executive Director, Trade Law Centre and member of the Committee for Developmen­t Policy (CDP), Trudi Hartzenber­g, said the AfCFTA clearly made provisions for phased tariff concession­s.

Hartzenber­g said all member states have agreed that 90% of tariff lines are to be liberalise­d.

Under the free trade pact, a distinctio­n is drawn between Least Developed Countries (LDCs) and non-LDCs for the tariff negotiatio­ns.

LDCs have 10 years to achieve 90% liberalisa­tion, while non-LDCs, where Nigeria falls in, have five years.

The remaining 10% tariff line is split into 7% for sensitive products and 3% may not be liberalise­d entirely.

The Chief Trade Negotiator/ Acting Director General of NOTN, Victor Liman, recently said

Nigeria is concerned about transhipme­nt of goods saying Nigeria won’t accept goods imported from outside the African continent, but labelled as produced within Africa.

Reacting, Chief Ede Dafinone, the Chairman Export Group, Manufactur­ers Associatio­n of Nigeria (MAN) said the decision to consider the reopening of the border is long overdue.

“Most of us manufactur­ing for export did not see the benefit and reason for the closure.”

He said local production has ramped up in textile, rice, amongst others. “The government needs to devise a way of protecting these sectors. The CBN has set out 43 items which it prohibits from forex to some items that is a huge restrictio­n already.”

 ??  ?? President Muhammadu Buhari
President Muhammadu Buhari

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