• Aucun résultat trouvé

Continued research key as Africa moves towards implementation of game-changing AfCFTA

N/A
N/A
Protected

Academic year: 2022

Partager "Continued research key as Africa moves towards implementation of game-changing AfCFTA"

Copied!
3
0
0

Texte intégral

(1)

10/31/2020 Continued research key as Africa moves towards implementation of game-changing AfCFTA | United Nations Economic Commissi…

https://www.uneca.org/stories/continued-research-key-africa-moves-towards-implementation-game-changing-afcfta 1/3

Continued research key as Africa moves towards implementation of game-changing AfCFTA

uneca.org/stories/continued-research-key-africa-moves-towards-implementation-game-changing-afcfta

Media Centre

Continued research key as Africa moves towards implementation of game-changing AfCFTA

Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, October 20, 2020 (ECA) – Thorough research and continuous interaction between researchers and policy makers is crucial to ensure the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCTA) delivers for the continent, in particular

consolidating African markets into a single market of more than 1.2 billion people and a GDP of over US$2.5 trillion.

This was said by the Director of the Regional Integration and Trade Division of the Economic Commission for Africa (ECA), Stephen Karingi, in a keynote address to the Seventh Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa (COMESA) Annual Research Forum on the theme; “Harnessing Intra-COMESA Trade through the Interface with the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA)”.

He said the AfCFTA offered tremendous possibilities for businesses across the continent while expanding tax base for governments as a result of expanded or new business opportunities, adding the successful implementation of the pact will also depend in part on Regional Economic Commissions (RECs), both in terms of leveraging RECs

achievements and also learning from and avoiding some of the pitfalls and challenges they have faced.

“There is a multiplicity of intervening enabling and impeding factors, including capacity constraints, which would shape and structure the AfCFTA-REC interface. These have the potential to determine the success or failure of these otherwise transformative integrative initiatives. These factors and forces need to be properly analyzed, understood and

engaged, including through research and continuous interaction between researchers and policy makers,” said Mr. Karingi.

With a membership of 21 states, a population of some 560 million people and a combined GDP of US$769 billion, COMESA is one of Africa’s biggest RECs and has made significant progress in many areas of integration.

Intra-COMESA trade growth, however, remains low compared to the region’s trade with the rest of the world both in terms of exports and imports.

“It is envisaged that a fully operational AfCFTA would among others, herald greater policy convergence, certainty and predictability; simplify rules across the different African trade regimes; as well as put in place mechanisms that would address the removal of non-tariff barriers and enhance trade facilitation,” said Mr. Karingi.

(2)

10/31/2020 Continued research key as Africa moves towards implementation of game-changing AfCFTA | United Nations Economic Commissi…

https://www.uneca.org/stories/continued-research-key-africa-moves-towards-implementation-game-changing-afcfta 2/3

“..the AfCFTA would serve as an incentive for investors, as well as facilitate the transfer of technologies, promote industrialization and the enhancement of productivity. The

cumulative effects of these, it is hoped, would be the boosting, not only of inter–REC trade, but more importantly, intra-REC trade, including among COMESA member States,” he added.

Mr. Karingi said the AfCFTA-COMESA interface, if properly managed, would generate a range of win-win outcomes for various stakeholders in Africa’s integration agenda. The agreement provides COMESA countries with opportunities to position and reposition themselves on critical nodes of regional value chains for both goods and services, he said.

According to recent estimates by ECA, by 2040 the AfCFTA could increase the annual value of agricultural and food exports by US$16.8 billion, energy and mining exports by US$9 billion, and industrial exports by US$43.3 billion.

The largest percentage increases, (that is over 25% in intra-African exports for industrial sectors) are found in textile, wearing apparel, leather, wood and paper, vehicle and transport, agro-foods such milk and dairy products, sugar, beverages, vegetables, fruit, nuts and rice.

For her part, COMESA Secretary General, Chileshe Kapwepwe, said the theme of the forum could not have come at a better time when there is renewed impetus for shaping the African political, economic and social development.

“The ACFTA is the strategic framework for delivering on Africa's goal for consolidating a single market, fostering structural transformation, and attaining inclusive economic growth and sustainable development,” she said.

Ms. Kapwepwe said the capacity building interventions in research and training carried out by COMESA were aimed at enhancing not only the capacity of the COMESA

Secretariat but also that of its member states in areas such as economic and trade policy analysis and research, as well as trade negotiations.

Issued by:

Communications Section

Economic Commission for Africa PO Box 3001

Addis Ababa Ethiopia

Tel: +251 11 551 5826 E-mail: eca-info@un.org

(3)

10/31/2020 Continued research key as Africa moves towards implementation of game-changing AfCFTA | United Nations Economic Commissi…

https://www.uneca.org/stories/continued-research-key-africa-moves-towards-implementation-game-changing-afcfta 3/3

Références

Documents relatifs

These economic communities in fact began to develop and institute schemes for the removal of customs barriers while completely forgetting that the member States, neither at a

government spending on both growth and poverty reduction in several countries of Asia, and in Uganda— countries representing different stages of economic development and, hence,

Addis Ababa, 25 November 2014 (ECA) - The African Development Bank, the African Union Commission and the Economic Commission for Africa have joined forces to produce an Africa

It has aimed at strengthening the capacity of Member States in their effective participation in the global economy through promoting intra-regional and international trade and

At the continental level, for instance, ECA has already joined forces with the African Union, African Development Bank, and the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development

r~ferred the Commission to the report of the second Conference of African Statistici~ns (document E/Ca.14/1l3) and to the report en regional co- operation in the field of

104. As is seen from Section A, exchange rate depreciation has been used by a fairly large number of African countries, particularly in connection with Fund-supported programmes.

Kampala, Uganda 21 November 2019 – The UN Economic Commission for Africa (ECA) and Trademark East Africa (TMEA) launched the National impact assessment report that presented the