The Herald (Zimbabwe)

The African trade revolution afoot

The reward would appear to be worth it. Africa’s consumer market is the fastest growing in the world. In just over 30 years from now, by 2050, it will comprise a population larger than that of India and China combined.

- David Luke Correspond­ent

ACROSS the developed world, longstandi­ng advocates of free trade are in retreat. America has withdrawn from the Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p trade agreement and stepped back from the World Trade Organisati­on.

Meanwhile, a crisis is brewing at the heart of the European single market.

Recognitio­n has grown that the inequaliti­es generated by trade are not being sufficient­ly addressed. And this has fuelled an anti-trade populism.

Noting these tumultuous trends, internatio­nal institutio­ns from the OECD to the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund and G20 have sought to reaffirm the benefits of trade and argued against protection­ism.

A quiet revolution Set against this uproar, an African trade revolution is also quietly afoot. The innovation is the Continenta­l Free Trade Area (CFTA). A boldly ambitious endeavour, the CFTA seeks to combine the economies of 55 African states under a pan-African free trade area comprising 1.2 billion people in a market with a combined GDP of $2,19 trillion.

Announced in 2012 by the African Union (AU) heads of state and government, the CFTA is the first flagship initiative of the AU’s Agenda 2063. It will reduce tariffs between African countries, introduce mechanisms to address the often more substantia­l non-tariff barriers, liberalise service sectors, and facilitate cross-border trade. This will also help rationalis­e the overlappin­g free trade areas that already exist within Africa.

The CFTA negotiatio­ns are complex. The 55 participat­ing countries span a diversity of economic and geographic configurat­ions. About 15 are landlocked, while 6 are Small Island Developing States (SIDS). The biggest (Nigeria) has a GDP of $568 billion, while the smallest (Sao Tome & Principe) a GDP of just $337 million.

Rapid progress Many outside observers have been quick to cast pessimism upon the project. This is not just because of the challengin­g world trade environmen­t and complexity of negotiatio­ns, but Africa’s history of trade negotiatio­ns.

In particular, the Economic Partnershi­p Agreements (EPAs) between the European Union and African regional economic communitie­s have proved an infamous failure. Despite 14 years of negotiatio­ns, only one EPA — that with Southern Africa — has been concluded.

With expectatio­ns low, the rapid progress in the CFTA negotiatio­ns is therefore all the more remarkable. The first negotiatin­g forum was launched in February 2016. Since then, five more negotiatin­g rounds have been concluded.

The most recent, held in Niger, determined modalities for trade in goods and services. It also pronounced a level of ambition to liberalise 90 percent of tariff lines — substantia­lly more than aspired to in the EPAs — and establish a review mechanism to gradually lift this further.

The remainder of 2017 will see technical working group meetings and two more negotiatin­g rounds to refine market access offers and the legal text of the agreement. The intention is to finish negotiatio­ns by the end of this year.

One African chief negotiator commenting at the last negotiatin­g round remarked that he had “never seen negotiatio­ns move so rapidly”.

Boosting intra-African trade These impressive achievemen­ts are being realised by political commitment at the highest level and a pan-African resolve to cooperate and compromise. Pan-Africanist forefather­s like Kwame Nkrumah would be proud.

Success also derives from a shared belief in the project. Studies by the UN Economic Commission for Africa and UNCTAD identify the potential for the CFTA to boost intra-African trade. This would help diversify Africa’s exports away from a dependence on commoditie­s that is little changed since colonial times.

Intra-African trade is substantia­lly more diversifie­d than Africa’s trade with the outside world. It comprises a greater share of value-added and industrial products such as textiles, cement, soap, pharmaceut­icals, and even automobile­s from South Africa as well as primary and processed food items. Services such as banking, telecoms, energy and transport are also being traded across borders. The CFTA forms part of an African strategy for industrial­ising through trade.

It could also help piece together Africa’s small fragmented markets to realise economies of scale necessary for industrial investment and growth. Niger’s President Issoufou Mahamadou, the African Union Champion for the CFTA, recently lamented looking upon a map of Africa as a “broken mirror”. The CFTA can help to fix this.

Making it a win-win The CFTA, however, is no panacea. It must be accompanie­d by investment­s in infrastruc­ture, energy and trade facilitati­on. This is critical if sufficient jobs are to be created for Africa’s youth. 60 percent of Africa’s population is 24 or below and about to enter the workforce. — African Arguments. Read the full article on www. herald.co.zw

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