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Africa Urged to Dismantle Trade, Movement Barriers to Spur Growth

sudanesia

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KIGALI: African economies must reduce trade barriers and make it easier for people and goods to cross borders to boost growth in the face of headwinds from a commodity price drop, African officials and delegates at the World Economic Forum in Rwanda said.
The International Monetary Fund said average growth in sub-Saharan Africa would fall to its lowest in nearly two decades this year, at 3 percent, with commodity exporters struggling and government finances coming under pressure.
“As we develop the regional markets in Africa, we’ll reduce the susceptibility of Africa to these global commodity price shocks,” African Development Bank (AfDB) President Akinwumi Adesina told a news conference in the Rwandan capital Kigali.
Trade between African nations accounted for just 11 percent of total transactions, compared with Asia where regional trade accounted for 40 percent and Europe where it was 70 percent.
Adesina said there were some positive signs — Africa-to-Africa investment had climbed, rising from $10 billion to $50 billion a year — although he didn’t give a time frame.
But he said high tariffs and non-tariff barriers such as poor roads, railways and ports hindered progress.
“If there were a real willingness to dismantle trade barriers, you could get growth gains regardless of what was happening in the rest of the world because of broader markets,” said Razia Khan, Africa economist at Standard Chartered Bank.
While there are several trading blocs in Africa, few have acted swiftly to completely dismantle barriers to commerce, though the six-member East African Community has moved further than most to ease trade across borders. The EAC comprises Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda, Rwanda, Burundi and, most lately, South Sudan.
Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta said slower growth on the continent should spur closer regional trade relations. “It is a wake-up call,” he said.
Like several other African nations, Kenya is building a new railway to speed up transport links between the capital Nairobi and its main port Mombasa. The line will extend to neighboring Uganda, and could eventually be connected to Rwanda.
Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni said in Kampala on Thursday that the new rail link would cut the cost of transporting a container from Kenya’s coast to his landlocked country from $3,500 to $1,500, reduce the time it took from three days to one, and prevent roads being worn out by trucks.
Adesina said simple problems persisted, citing what he said were private comments made to him by an African billionaire investor who said he often had trouble visiting African states.
“(If) you don’t let your richest African into the country just because of a problem with a visa, that just tells you how difficult that issue is,” he said.
source: sudanvisiondaily.com
 
KIGALI: African economies must reduce trade barriers and make it easier for people and goods to cross borders to boost growth in the face of headwinds from a commodity price drop, African officials and delegates at the World Economic Forum in Rwanda said.
The International Monetary Fund said average growth in sub-Saharan Africa would fall to its lowest in nearly two decades this year, at 3 percent, with commodity exporters struggling and government finances coming under pressure.
“As we develop the regional markets in Africa, we’ll reduce the susceptibility of Africa to these global commodity price shocks,” African Development Bank (AfDB) President Akinwumi Adesina told a news conference in the Rwandan capital Kigali.
Trade between African nations accounted for just 11 percent of total transactions, compared with Asia where regional trade accounted for 40 percent and Europe where it was 70 percent.
Adesina said there were some positive signs — Africa-to-Africa investment had climbed, rising from $10 billion to $50 billion a year — although he didn’t give a time frame.
But he said high tariffs and non-tariff barriers such as poor roads, railways and ports hindered progress.
“If there were a real willingness to dismantle trade barriers, you could get growth gains regardless of what was happening in the rest of the world because of broader markets,” said Razia Khan, Africa economist at Standard Chartered Bank.
While there are several trading blocs in Africa, few have acted swiftly to completely dismantle barriers to commerce, though the six-member East African Community has moved further than most to ease trade across borders. The EAC comprises Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda, Rwanda, Burundi and, most lately, South Sudan.
Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta said slower growth on the continent should spur closer regional trade relations. “It is a wake-up call,” he said.
Like several other African nations, Kenya is building a new railway to speed up transport links between the capital Nairobi and its main port Mombasa. The line will extend to neighboring Uganda, and could eventually be connected to Rwanda.
Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni said in Kampala on Thursday that the new rail link would cut the cost of transporting a container from Kenya’s coast to his landlocked country from $3,500 to $1,500, reduce the time it took from three days to one, and prevent roads being worn out by trucks.
Adesina said simple problems persisted, citing what he said were private comments made to him by an African billionaire investor who said he often had trouble visiting African states.
“(If) you don’t let your richest African into the country just because of a problem with a visa, that just tells you how difficult that issue is,” he said.
source: sudanvisiondaily.com

That would be great, but reducing the trade barriers with the EU would be better, because the infrastructure for trade is already in place. If the EU stopped subsidizing their agricultural output and allowed their populations to "Buy African" instead of imposing all the non tariff barriers, Africa would star growing immediately.
 
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