Take a look at the beta version of dw.com. We’re not done yet! Your opinion can help us make it better.
We use cookies to improve our service for you. You can find more information in our data protection declaration.
Africa’s free trade area started a year ago amid much fanfare. But its impact has been low amid the coronavirus pandemic and an economic downturn on the continent.
The secretariat of the African Continental Free Trade Area in Ghana’s capital, Accra
The African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) celebrates its first anniversary on January 1, 2022.
With exception of Eritrea, all African countries are signatories to the agreement.
Over time, ratifying counties pledge to eliminate import tariffs on 97% of goods traded between African states.
Many hope this will increase trade between African countries, which will in turn boost manufacturing and create jobs, bringing more prosperity and social equality to those on the continent.
African nations currently trade more internationally than with each other. Intra-African trade accounts for 17% of African exports, which is low compared to 59% for Asia and 68% for Europe, according to the World Economic Forum.
But AfCFTA wants to do more than just boost trade in goods — its scope includes services, investment, intellectual property rights and competition policy, although these aspects are still under negotiation.
The continental body aims to achieve these dreams by 2064.
But since Africa officially started trading under AfCFTA in January 2021, the practical impacts of the agreement have been minimal, said Matthias Boddenberg, head of the German Chamber of Commerce and Industry for Southern Africa.
Disruptions of global supply chains due to coronavirus restrictions in 2020 limited AfCFTA’s potential, Boddenberg said.
“Manufacturers in neighboring Botswana couldn’t supply wiring harnesses for the auto industry in South Africa because borders were closed,” he said, giving an example.
Tanzanian economist Gabriel Mwang’omda, however, believes the free trade area is a learning curve for the continent.
He argued that Africa’s vastness makes it impossible for AfCFTA to be fruitful within a year.
“This was expected that we are going to start slow,” Mwang’omda told DW.
In the pre-pandemic era, African trade in goods and services amounted to around 3% of global exports and imports.
In 2019, African countries recorded exports of $462 billion (€407 billion) and imports of $569 billion in merchandise trade. This constituted a fall of 3% on average compared to 2018.
The World Trade Organization (WTO) and the International Monetary Fund in their October 2020 global trade forecasts downgraded Africa’s economic growth by –8.0% and 3.0% respectively.
The World Bank also confirmed it with –3.3% in 2020.
This slump pushed the region into its first recession in 25 years, driving up to 40 million people into extreme poverty across the continent and erasing at least five years of progress in fighting poverty, according to the WTO.
AfCFTA began its operation against the backdrop of these economic forecasts.
Other issues also slowed down the uptake of trade opportunities under the agreement.
According to Boddenberg, African companies, especially those in smaller countries, weren’t sufficiently informed about what the agreement’s benefits.
“If the African Union was to conduct direct marketing campaigns to companies, it could boost intra-African trade,” he told DW.
For Mwang’omda, the trade deal does not have the necessary full backing despite the fact that almost all countries are signatories to it.
“The political will is not 100% and not every country is committed to implementing this free trade area agreement,” he said.
On New Year’s Day 2021, Africa’s economies ring in a new era with the official launch of the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA). The coming months and years will see the creation of the world’s largest free trade zone. Experts say the agreement has enormous potential, but the COVID-19 pandemic has made implementation difficult.
Police operations targeting the opposition — including challengers and protesters — have resulted in dozens of deaths. Images from Uganda’s election campaign have sparked worldwide concern. On January 14, citizens will choose between long-term President Yoweri Museveni and former pop star Robert Kyagulanyi, aka Bobi Wine. Observers have stressed the importance of holding free and fair elections.
Will Ethiopians find unity after the central government’s offensive against the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF)? Or will the country fracture under the weight of its many internal conflicts? 2021 could decide whether Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed can achieve democratic balance in Ethiopia. The elections planned for June 5 may be his best chance.
One consequence of the conflict in Tigray is clear: Tens of thousands have fled the embattled region to neighboring Sudan, where the fledgling government is struggling to provide for them. Elsewhere, too, it is feared that ongoing conflicts will lead to new refugee crises in 2021, while old ones remain unresolved. It will be another difficult year in Cameroon, northern Nigeria and DR Congo.
Alongside Uganda and Ethiopia, Benin, Somalia, South Sudan, Zambia, Cape Verde, Chad and The Gambia will head to the polls in 2021 to elect new heads of state. While some countries are hoping for relatively uneventful elections, the situation in Somalia and South Sudan is already tense due to challenging security environments.
Although African countries are making it through the pandemic better than expected, the health and economic consequences are immense. Hopes for a vaccine are high, but Africa is not yet ready for “the largest vaccination campaign ever,” Matshidiso Moeti of the World Health Organization (WHO) said recently. Experts don’t expect vaccination to begin until mid-2021 due to logistical difficulties.
One consequence of the coronavirus pandemic won’t simply disappear even after vaccinations are rolled out: Some African countries are facing state bankruptcy. Although the G20 initiated debt relief at the onset of the outbreak, NGOs are now calling for a comprehensive debt cut to mitigate the humanitarian consequences of COVID-19.
Droughts, locust plagues, floods: No continent is suffering so acutely from the climate crisis as Africa. But young activists like Vanessa Nakate from Uganda no longer want the lip service of the Global North. She is fighting for Africa to be heard on the global stage and will be one of the continent’s most vocal representatives the at the UN Climate Change Conference in November 2021.
Author: Jan Philipp Wilhelm
There are high hopes that all 54 signatory countries will grow together to form a single market.
Although the COVID pandemic delayed the start of the free trade zone, economists said the pandemic also had some benefits: The lockdown to curb the spread of the virus forced many companies to go digital and start using online solutions to reach employees, customers and clients.
The extent to which companies have benefited from economic growth and new jobs across national borders will only become apparent later.
Promoting free trade in Africa necessiates more than the AfCFTA agreement, experts said.
The continent needs to construct vital infrastructure such as roads, bridges, rail and air routes to make intra-African trade easier.
“It is still more expensive to fly from Tanzania to DR Congo, than from Tanzania to China, Dubai or India,” said Tanzanian economist Gabriel Mwang’omda. “A Kenyan trader will prefer to buy sugar all the way from Brazil than from neighboring Uganda.”
“This tells you that bad infrastructure is hindering the smooth implementation of the free trade area,” Mwang’omda added.
There are other hurdles, such as long waiting times at border crossings, corruption and excessive bureaucracy.
But ongoing negotiations to shape the agreement are taking place behind closed doors and it is impossible for non-state actors to see how they are developing.
Another big challenge is that little data is available on trade in Africa, according to Alastair Tempest, managing director of the South African industry association Ecommerce Forum Africa.
There are currently eight regional economic blocs recognized by the African Union, including the East African Economic Community (EAC), the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) and the Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa (COMESA).
Alastair Tempest said he thinks these blocks will use the African-wide trade deal for their own benefit.
“What is certain is that some of the regional economic communities will promote the development of trade within their own borders with new regional value chains,” he said.
But Tanzanian economist Mwang’omda isn’t so optimistic. He believes the many issues between AfCFTA and the current regional economic blocs poses a major hurdle to free trade across the continent.
Edited by: Kate Hairsine and Keith Walker
The newly signed African free trade agreement is hailed as a huge step forward by some, but criticized as a mammoth project with little chance of ever coming true by others.
Africa’s new free trade deal is a building block in its plan to achieve prosperity and unity. Yet stumbling blocks in the form of border and trade disputes make a borderless continent seem decades away.
Got an opinion about the stories making headlines? Send us a text at +49-160-9575 9510. International SMS charges apply. Please make sure to include your name and your country. We will sample your texts in our show.
© 2022 Deutsche Welle | Privacy Policy | Legal notice | Contact | Mobile version