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AfCFTA: Africa readying for free trade come January 2021

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AfCFTA: Africa readying for free trade come January 2021

Exciting times ahead for traders despite anticipated teething problems and COVID-19
Kingsley Ighobor
From Africa Renewal: 
30 November 2020
cocoa
Meron Dagnew
Cocoa.
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One day in February 2020, Accra-based coffee and cocoa trader Meron Dagnew visited the Secretariat of the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) to introduce herself, even before the Secretariat was fully operational.

鈥淚 couldn鈥檛 wait,鈥 she told Africa Renewal in a recent interview 鈥淚 need free trading in Africa to begin as quickly as possible; it will be so good for my business.鈥

The AfCFTA Secretariat officially opened in Accra on 17 August 2020, although, because of the COVID-19 pandemic, free trading will now begin on 1st January 2021 instead of the originally scheduled date of 1 July 2020.

Ms. Dagnew is eager to take advantage of reduced tariffs and a consolidated market 鈥 potential spinoffs from AfCFTA 鈥 to expand the operations of her company, BE Kollective that imports Ethiopian coffee to Ghana and exports Ghanaian cocoa to Ethiopia.

Meron Dagnew
Meron Dagnew.

鈥淚 am hoping to not pay as much as 35 per cent tariffs on my goods; I am hoping that soon I can take my value-added cocoa and coffee to African countries without problems of rules of origin. I could then make more profit, expand my business and hire more people,鈥 she says.

Ethiopia is one of the world鈥檚 largest coffee producers and Ghana is the world鈥檚 second-largest cocoa producer, after C么te d鈥橧voire. Ms. Dagnew is particularly attracted to West Africa鈥檚 market of 380 million people.

High tariffs and non-tariff barriers such as customs delays and administrative bottlenecks at border posts underscore the challenges facing African traders and at the same time accentuate a strong desire by traders for a free trade zone.

The AfCFTA eliminates tariffs on 90 per cent of goods produced on the continent, tackles non-tariff barriers to trade and guarantees the free movement of persons.

Ms. Dagnew鈥檚 business slowed down in March 2020 just as the pandemic began to rage. As African economies start to slowly open while adjusting to the realities of the pandemic, Ms. Dagnew intends to restart trading soon.

Yet, she frets about other structural challenges to intra-African trade, such as the competition with big global brands that compete on an uneven playing field. For example, BE Kollective, according to Ms. Dagnew, competes with Nescaf茅, which is imported into Ghana by retailers.

Accra-based coffee and cocoa trader Meron Dagnew at the Secretariat of the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA).

鈥淭he problem is that importers of Nescaf茅 from countries in Europe or Asia pay much less tariff than I pay because those countries have favourable trade agreements with African countries,鈥 she stresses. 鈥淭herefore, the odds are currently stacked against us intra-African traders.鈥

Ms. Dagnew is also concerned that countries鈥 customs services lack adequate information about the AfCFTA.

鈥淣ot long ago, I went to the customs service in Ghana and told them I wouldn鈥檛 need to pay tariffs at some point because of AfCFTA. They didn鈥檛 understand what I was talking about,鈥 she recalls. 鈥淭here are many traders who have no idea what AfCFTA is all about.鈥

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She recommends a massive information campaign to raise awareness of AfCFTA among customs services, traders and other key actors in countries participating in the free trade area.

Lack of infrastructure

A lack of adequate modern transport infrastructure also impedes traders鈥 desire to reap the full benefits of free trade, studies show. With the right transport infrastructure and high integration, manufacturers of consumer goods could earn up to $326 billion per year, according to McKinsey & Company, a US-based management consulting firm.

And according to the World Bank, it takes about three and a half weeks for a container of car parts to be cleared by Congolese customs. While East African countries Tanzania and Uganda have established a one-stop border post to slash time for cargo movement between them, new delays in the form of divergent standards for goods have quickly emerged, underscoring the mutating nature of non-tariff barriers.

African countries could rake in $20 billion yearly by simply tackling non-tariff barriers that slow the movement of goods, according to the 缅北禁地Conference on Trade and Development, the 缅北禁地entity that deals with trade investment and development issues.

The African Union (AU)鈥檚 efforts at boosting infrastructure through its Programme for Infrastructure Development in Africa (PIDA) are expected to yield the Lagos-Abidjan transport corridor, the Zambia-Tanzania-Kenya power transmission line, the Lagos-Algiers highway and the Brazzaville-Kinshasa bridge, among others.

But experts encourage individual countries to invest in modern port, airport and rail line infrastructure.

Women traders

Widely spoken about in intra-African trade conversations are the challenges that women traders face.听听

Women constitute 70 per cent of Africa鈥檚 informal cross-border traders, and according to a 2019听听by 缅北禁地Women titled听Opportunities for Women Entrepreneurs in the Context of the AfCFTA, African women traders often confront corruption, insecurity and sexual harassment.

A female trader in North Kordofan, Sudan repack Gum Arabic lots.
A female trader in North Kordofan, Sudan repack Gum Arabic lots. Photo: Salahaldeen Nadir/World Bank

The AfCFTA agreement itself requires countries to protect the vulnerable, including women traders, and to address corruption.

African states with bilateral trade agreements with foreign countries or other regions such as the European Union will need to walk a tightrope in meeting prior commitments while implementing the AfCFTA.

In February 2020, for instance, East Africa鈥檚 economic giant Kenya began bilateral trade talks with the US, a move seemingly at odds with the country鈥檚 commitment to Africa鈥檚 free trade area.

Optimistic projections of the benefits of Africa鈥檚 free trade are, in theory, based on orthodox economic calculations 鈥 a linear demand and supply correlation that may not fully encompass externalities such as the availability of countries鈥 implementation capacity, requisite infrastructure, policy coherence and so on.

The World Economic Forum signals that AfCFTA鈥檚 full and effective implementation is what will lead to its transformative impacts, meaning that its touted benefits are by no means guaranteed.

The Secretary-General of AfCFTA, Wamkele Mene, acknowledges the enormous tasks ahead. 鈥淲e have to roll up our sleeves and work,鈥 he told听Africa Renewal听in an earlier interview.

Yet there is much to celebrate regarding the free trade agreement. The pact consolidates a market of 1.2 billion people and a combined GDP of $2.5 trillion. It would represent the world鈥檚 largest trading block by the number of participating countries if all AU member states were to ratify the agreement.

While some听听have so far ratified the agreement, more countries are expected to join the bandwagon when free trading begins and its benefits become tangible.

Mr. Mene estimates that intra-African trade could increase from its current 18 per cent to听50 per cent by 2030.

It will boost earnings for traders, strengthen Africa鈥檚 competitiveness in the global marketplace, foster export diversification and enhance value addition to produce and transform natural resources.

Because of the AfCFTA, Africa鈥檚 manufacturing output is expected to double to $1 trillion, creating 14 million jobs by 2025, writes Landry Sign茅 for Brookings Institution, a Washington, D.C.-based think tank.

An industrializing continent will catalyze the agricultural sector. In the coming years, Mr. Sign茅 anticipates, manufacturing will complement 鈥渁gricultural production and agro-processing plants, which provide the food and energy to meet growing African and global demand.鈥

He adds that African youth engaged in computer software and apps development will seize the opportunity to produce 鈥渓eapfrog鈥 technologies to meet increasing domestic demand. In other words, good paying jobs will be created for the continent鈥檚 bulging youth population.

鈥淎cross all subsectors and countries, Africa鈥檚 industrial revolution appears imminent,鈥 Mr. Sign茅 declares, optimistically.听

Meanwhile, African traders envisage the end of the COVID-19 pandemic or at least its receding soon. They hope the teething problems that arise will be tackled and that AfCFTA will be a shot in the arm for Africa鈥檚 development.

鈥淚t will be a dream come true for traders like me,鈥 enthuses Ms. Dagnew.

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