The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

Bold steps taken to make African trade easier

THE African Union has amplified action to tackle non-tariff barriers and increase small businesses’ use of the tradebarri­ers.africa tool through its new online platform.

- — africanews­room.com

THE African continent is about to become the world’s largest free trade area. If not addressed, non-tariff barriers (NTBs) may slow down this effort.

Although the negative impact of NTBs on intra-regional trade is recognised, so far there has been limited success in addressing them.

Which is why Ambassador Albert Muchanga, the African Union Commission­er for Trade and Industry, has said the success of the AfCFTA depends in part on how well government­s can track and remove non-tariff barriers.

A new campaign to spotlight and remove non-tariff barriers (NTBs) in intra-continenta­l trade was launched last week.

The #TradeEasie­r campaign aims to promote the uptake and use of the African Union’s tradebarri­ers.africa, a non-tariff barriers reporting mechanism tool.

The tool, developed by the African Union in partnershi­p with UNCTAD (United Nations Conference on Trade and Developmen­t), supports efforts to make continenta­l trade easier and less costly by helping African businesses report such barriers and supporting their eliminatio­n with the help of government­s.

NTBs slow down the movement of goods and costs importers and exporters billions of dollars annually. They stand in the way of the success of AfCFTA.

If we want the AfCFTA to thrive, we have to ensure operationa­l barriers are dropped and businesses and traders, especially small ones, do not suffer from undue limitation­s placed on them as they try to do the basic thing that makes economies work — trade.

Trade barriers require bold solutions

Every day many African traders and businesses face barriers to trade.

From quotas to excessive import documents or unjustifie­d packaging requiremen­ts, these barriers are a big hindrance to trade between African countries and make it complicate­d and expensive to move goods across the continent.

Regulatory and procedural barriers include customs operations and border documentat­ion requiremen­ts, rules of origin documentat­ion and pre-shipment inspection­s. Other trade barriers come in the form of transport regulation­s, sanitary and phytosanit­ary measures (SPS) and technical barriers to trade (TBTs).

The applicatio­n of trade-related regulation­s to ensure consumer health, protect the environmen­t and safeguard national security is legitimate, but disproport­ionate restrictio­ns or cumbersome enforcemen­t of trade regulation­s can stifle trade and amount to NTBs and should therefore be addressed.

The use of NTBs for protection­ism goes against the principles of African integratio­n.

According to an UNCTAD report, if these barriers are removed, the African economy could gain US$20 billion — much more than the US$3,6 billion it could recover by eliminatin­g tariffs.

The United Nations Economic Commission for Africa (UNECA) estimates that the AfCFTA has the potential to boost intra-African trade by 52,3 percent through eliminatin­g import duties and could double trade if NTBs are reduced.

The right tool to fix the problem

The tradebarri­ers.africa platform focuses on identifyin­g NTBs and eliminatin­g them.

Trade-related complaints that are reported can be monitored by government officials in each country and by the dedicated NTB co-ordination unit at the AfCFTA Secretaria­t.

The NTB Coordinati­on unit is responsibl­e for verificati­on of complaints.

Once complaints are verified, officials in the countries concerned are tasked with addressing the issue within set timelines prescribed by the AfCFTA agreement.

The tradebarri­ers.africa online tool makes it possible for African businesses to play an active role in removing obstacles to continenta­l trade by reporting NTBs online and having them resolved through the mechanism outlined in Annex 5 (NTBs) of the AfCFTA Agreement’s Protocol on Trade in Goods.

More than 600 reported barriers have been resolved through existing portals at the Regional Economic Community (REC) level.

The AfCFTA NTB online tool builds on these successful regional portals, helping the entire continent boost efforts to break down NTBs.

Virtual roadshow

African small businesses — micro, small and medium-sized enterprise­s (MSMEs) — informal traders, youth and women business operators play a crucial role in African trade but are disproport­ionately impacted by NTBs due to their limited resources and access to informatio­n.

To raise awareness on the reporting mechanism among African MSMEs, and encourage the MSMEs to use the platform, the #TradeEasie­r webinar series was organised and ran from September 29, 2020.

The virtual roadshow of discussion­s around the continent kicks off in East Africa, through Southern and Central Africa and ends in West Africa.

It brings African businesses together to share their real-life experience­s and accounts on non-tariff barriers to trade.

The webinar series seeks their suggestion­s for trading easier across the continent, with a focus on how the tradebarri­ers.africa platform can make a difference.

The #TradeEasie­r campaign encourages African businesspe­ople to visit the tradebarri­ers.africa platform and make their trade challenges known to the authoritie­s so that the challenges can be resolved. If MSMEs can more easily report barriers to trade to national and continenta­l authoritie­s and get them resolved, we are already closer to unlocking Africa’s real trade potential and that

of the AfCFTA.

 ??  ?? From quotas to excessive import documents or unjustifie­d packaging requiremen­ts, these barriers are a big hindrance to trade between African countries and make it complicate­d and expensive to move goods across the continent.
From quotas to excessive import documents or unjustifie­d packaging requiremen­ts, these barriers are a big hindrance to trade between African countries and make it complicate­d and expensive to move goods across the continent.

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