African countries began officially trading under the African
Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) on Jan. 1, after months of
delays caused by the global coronavirus pandemic.
Experts, however, say full implementation of the deal will
likely take years.
Under the agreement establishing the AfCFTA, members must phase
out 90% of tariff lines over the next five to 10 years. Another
7% considered sensitive will get more time, while 3% will be
allowed to be placed on an exclusion list.
Forty-one of the zone's 54 member states have submitted tariff
reduction schedules.
Meanwhile, the rules of origin - an essential step for
determining which products can be subject to tariffs and duties
- must also be completed.
During a panel discussion at the Reuters Next conference on
Monday, Silver Ojakol, chief of staff at the AfCFTA Secretariat,
said nearly 90% of the rules of origin had now been agreed.
"So the remaining 10% must be completed by July this year," he
said. "By the end of June, we should have completed both the
tariff scheduling and the rules of origin."
The AfCFTA aims to bring together 1.3 billion people in a $3.4
trillion economic bloc that will be the largest free trade area
since the establishment of the World Trade Organization.
The World Bank estimates it could lift tens of millions out of
poverty by 2035.
But Ojakol said that the remaining obstacles were not simply
related to tariff harmonisation.
"The biggest challenge perhaps is infrastructure
interconnectivity to ease trading," he said.
Africa's poor road and rail links and excessive border
bureaucracy will not disappear overnight.
"I do think there are a lot of green shoots, a lot of bright
spots on the horizon in terms of investor appetite for
infrastructure in Africa," Fola Fagbule, senior vice-president
at the Africa Finance Corporation (AFC), said during the
discussion.
The AFC recently secured $250 million in financing from the U.S.
Development Finance Corporation to help fund infrastructure
projects on the continent.
For more coverage from the Reuters Next conference please click
here or www.reuters.com/business/reuters-next To watch Reuters
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events/next/register.php
(Reporting by Joe Bavier; Editing by Alex Richardson)
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