The leaders of 26 African countries
gathered in Egypt Wednesday to sign a new trade pact to create a common market
across half the continent that will serve 625 million people.
The
Tripartite Free Trade Area (TFTA) will cap five years of negotiations to set up
a common framework for preferential tariffs that will ease the movement of
goods across member countries.
The
signing will take place at a summit hosted by Egyptian President Abdel Fattah
al-Sisi in the Red Sea resort of Sharm el-Sheikh, where negotiators finished
drafting the deal this week.
AFP report continues:
"Tomorrow
we complete the formalities. The text of the treaty is ready; the Sharm
El-Sheikh Declaration is ready," Egypt's Minister of Industry and Trade
Mounir Fakhri Abdel Nour told AFP.
The
deal will pool the interests of the East African Community, Southern African
Development Community and the Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa (COMESA),
whose countries have a combined gross domestic product of more than US$1
trillion (885 billion euros).
Members
of the three blocs range from relatively developed economies such as South
Africa and Egypt to countries like Angola, Ethiopia and Mozambique, which are
seen as having huge growth potential.
Negotiators
said the agreement has addressed concerns such as management of trade disputes
and protection for small manufacturers once the TFTA comes into force.
The
schedule for "dismantling trade barriers" was yet to be worked out,
said Abdel Nour, and the agreement will still have to be ratified by national
parliaments within two years.
Officials
said TFTA envisions the eventual merger of the three blocs, but that bilateral
agreements between countries would continue.
"The
ultimate goal is to ensure easy movement of goods in these countries without
duties," said Peter Kiguta, director general of the Eastern African
Community.
-'One trade regime'-
Despite
scepticism, the TFTA has been widely welcomed by world business leaders, with
experts pointing out that only 12 percent of Africa's trade is between
countries on the continent.
The
United Nations Conference on Trade and Development said in 2013 that if Africa
is to boost its intra-continental trade, it must focus on creating "more
space for the private sector to play an active role".
Analysts
say that although the continent's growth over the past 15 years outstripped
global GDP expansion by nearly three percentage points, it faced falling
commodity prices, power shortages, political instability and corruption.
Abdel
Nour said the TFTA will help expand the region's market, boost competition and
attract investments as it also focuses on building infrastructure and
production capacities.
"Egypt
itself expects to export about US$5 billion worth of goods over the next five
years" to TFTA countries, he said.
The
business community, in particular, would benefit from an improved and harmonized
trade regime which reduces the cost of doing business as a result of the
elimination of overlapping trade rules.
"What
we have realized is that having one trade regime is better than the costly
multiple trade regimes," said COMESA Secretary General Sindiso Ngwenya,
who led the negotiations among the three blocs.
The
TFTA provides a mechanism for the identification, reporting, monitoring and
elimination of non-tariff barriers, officials say.
It
also aims to raise Africa's share of global trade, which currently stands at
about two percent.
"We
believe that this sends a powerful message that Africa is committed to its
economic integration agenda and in creating a conducive environment for trade
and investment," the South African government said last week.
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