The Citizen (Gauteng)

Informal sector vital part of continent’s trade system

- Joachim Jarreau, Cristina Mitaritonn­a and Sami Bensassi

The share of internal trade in Africa remains low, as reflected by official statistics. This is despite numerous regional trade agreements that have led to tariffs removal within the trading blocs. At least in principle.

There are a host of shortcomin­gs that limit trade: non-tariffs barriers, red tape and insufficie­nt infrastruc­ture. Tariff barriers remain high outside areas covered by the agreements. Enhancing trade integratio­n between African countries could yield large economic gains. This idea motivated the latest initiative for integratio­n, the continenta­l free trade area.

However, a large part of cross-border trade between African countries is informal. It either avoids customs entirely, or goes through official posts but is not recorded. Informal trade is difficult to measure. Most studies have relied on estimates based on partial surveys, or on accounting exercises. They concluded that a substantia­l share of Africa’s regional trade was informal, in the order of 30% to 40%.

Informal trade is pervasive for agricultur­al goods as well as many industrial goods. Some traders are entirely informal; others are registered businesses but escape trade regulation­s and duties nonetheles­s.

This gap in the measuremen­t of actual trade is problemati­c for trade policy. Why is it so pervasive and what should government­s do about it?

Our recently published study goes some way to filling the gap by looking into the magnitude, compositio­n and determinan­ts of informal trade in Benin.

What we found

In 2011, the national statistics of Benin identified 171 non-official border points to conduct a survey of informal trade.

As in many African countries, informal trade is pervasive in Benin. It operates in the open and is tolerated, for the most part, by officials. Each border post was surveyed for a period of 10 days.

Each trader crossing the border (in either direction) was asked a short questionna­ire about products and quantities traded, prices, origin and destinatio­n.

The rate of response to the survey was high. This means that, for the first time, there’s a representa­tive sample covering all informal trade at a country’s borders that can be compared with the official trade data such as customs data.

Using this data, our study confirms that informal trade is, in effect, a vital part of the trade system. For example, informal trade makes up the major part of trade in domestic products between Benin and Nigeria. Official statistics underestim­ate total trade by 50% for imports, and by about 85% for exports.

These figures are broadly in line with previous estimates for sub-Saharan countries. This confirms that trade statistics on the continent suffer from a serious blind spot.

Our study also shows that formal and informal trade differ by product compositio­n. Informal trade isn’t restricted to livestock and a few agricultur­al goods. Product and sector diversity is high. For example, industrial products – such as textiles, agrofood and transporta­tion equipment – are traded heavily on this channel.

Another noteworthy feature is that the product overlap between the formal and informal channels is very low: most goods are traded exclusivel­y on one or the other.

This suggests that official statistics are also massively underestim­ating the product diversity in regional trade.

So why are some products traded formally, while others are exclusivel­y traded informally?

Reasons for trade informalit­y

We estimate that products facing high tariffs are more likely to be traded informally. Non tariff barriers, such as sanitary and phytosanit­ary regulation­s, or technical barriers to trade (such as labelling requiremen­ts, quality standards), are also associated with more informalit­y.

This suggests that complying with these regulation­s represents a cost for traders. They are therefore willing to avoid them by skipping the customs controls.

This raises serious questions around issues of product quality. Controllin­g product quality and enforcing regulation­s is necessary for consumer protection. Frequent cases of food poisoning in Nigeria, and their associatio­n with informal trade, show the importance of this issue.

The difficulty lies in distinguis­hing between enforcemen­t and excessive requiremen­ts.

For example, our research shows that a lot of perishable products are traded exclusivel­y on the informal channel.

This suggests that traders aren’t avoiding formal channels because they want to smuggle products that don’t meet health and safety standards. They simply want to sell products that would otherwise be spoiled if kept for too long.

How to address trade informalit­y

There is a great deal of evidence that trade costs are high in sub-Saharan Africa. This is due to inadequate infrastruc­ture, excessive regulation­s and requiremen­ts at customs, as well as harassment and bribery. The pervasiven­ess of informal trade is a symptom of this.

Reducing tariffs should help formalise some of this informal trade. It’s possible that incentives to go informal remain high for many traders, even under the continent’s proposed free trade agreement, especially if preferenti­al treatment is costly or difficult to obtain.

Some authors suggest giving specific support to informal traders, for instance access to simplified trade regimes. The rationale for this is that there are too many obstacles – procedural and infrastruc­tural – preventing informal traders from operating within the official framework.

Informal trade is, in effect, a vital part of the trade system on the continent, improving food security, and providing a source of income for a substantia­l share of the population.

By reducing trade costs for a large share of trade operators, specific facilitati­on measures could offer valuable opportunit­ies to reduce poverty.

Joachim Jarreau Maître de conférence en économie, Université Paris Dauphine – PSL

Cristina Mitaritonn­a Senior trade economist, CEPII

Sami Bensassi Senior lecturer, University of Birmingham

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