Africa begins journey towards continentwide free-trade deal

6th April 2018

By: Bloomberg

  

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African leaders signed accords setting up a continental free-trade area that is expected to boost commerce within the 55-member African Union (AU) and eventually supplant a patchwork of existing agreements.

More than 40 nations signed the African Continental Free Trade Area, or AfCFTA, agreement, which commits governments to removing tariffs on 90% of goods and phasing in the rest in the future. The agreements will still require ratification by the individual governments and will come into force only when ratified by at least 22 countries.

“The promise of free trade and free movement is prosperity for all Africans, because we are prioritising the production of value-added goods and services that are ‘Made in Africa’,” Rwandan President Paul Kagame said as the leaders began signing the agreements last month. “The advantages we gain by creating one African market will also benefit our trading partners around the world.”

Intra-Africa trade stands at about 16% of the continent’s total, compared with 19 % in Latin America and 51% in Asia, according to the AU. The agreement could increase this by half for Africa, the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa estimates.

Three regional groups on the continent – the Common Market for East and Southern Africa, the Eastern African Community and the Southern African Development Community – signed an agreement in June 2015 to create a trade bloc covering 26 countries as a precursor to the continental grouping. A week later, members of the AU started talks for the establishment of the continentwide free trade area.

President Muhammadu Buhari, of Nigeria, which, together with South Africa, makes up half of the continent’s gross domestic product, cancelled his trip to Kigali, saying his government needed more time for input from local businesses before he could sign the pact. Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni and his Burundi counterpart, Pierre Nkurunziza, also skipped the gathering.

Concerned that the deal could lead to the dumping of finished goods in Nigeria, Buhari appointed a committee last week to review the agreement and report back within two weeks, Presidential spokesperson Femi Adesina told reporters in Abuja, the capital. “The way forward will then be unfolded,” he said.

Edited by Bloomberg

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