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28/5/2004
Africa Calls For Principles Of Fairer World Trade To Be Worked Out
By July
African government ministers in charge of their countries' economies,
meeting under the auspices of the United Nations Economic Commission
for Africa (ECA), have called on rich countries in the World Trade
Organization (WTO) to remove their high tariffs on developing country
exports, their distorting export subsidies and other obstacles
to fair trade by July.
"Africa's share in world merchandise exports fell from 6.3
per cent in 1980 to 2.5 per cent in 2000. Africa has hardly benefited
from the boom in manufactured exports, with Africa's share in world
manufactured exports remaining unchanged at 0.8 per cent in two
decades," the Ministers of Finance, Planning and Economic
Development said Saturday in the final statement of their annual
conference, held this year in Kampala, Uganda.
Africa's efforts at diversifying
its economies by including manufactured exports have been blocked
by rich country tariff escalation and
tariff peaks on manufactures from developing countries, with some
peaks as high as 900 per cent, they said. "We strongly recommend
that our development partners should take action to correct this," the
statement said.
The Ministers praised the United States legislation known as the
African Growth and Opportunity Act (AGOA) for opening a window
for African goods to be sold in that country. In this regard, they
agreed to write to the US Congress to express their concern over
delays in extending AGOA provisions from 2008 to 2015.
According to the World Bank, the May 2000 AGOA could have increased
Africa's non-oil exports by 8 to 11 per cent. Medium-term gains
could have been greater if AGOA had not imposed certain conditions,
including the stringent rule-of-origin stipulating that exporters
source certain inputs from either within Africa or in the United
States, it said.
In addition, Africa's apparel exports would drop by over 30 per
cent with the dismantling of the Multi-Fibre Arrangement (MFA)
at the beginning of 2005, giving African exports to the United
States competition from many other apparel manufacturers, the World
Bank said. If AGOA had provided unrestricted access, the negative
impact of the MFA's end could have been nearly fully offset.
In multilateral negotiations, the
question of cotton is critical, the ministers said. "This
sector is a key contributor to GDP and export earnings, and to
employment, in many African countries.
Policies in developed countries that have led to overproduction
and glutting of world markets have driven down world prices, thus
playing havoc with African economies."
The ministers also saw problems in their domestic trade policies
and pledged to find new, predictable sources of trade financing
and ways of maintaining fiscal stability while advancing trade
liberalization in their countries. Intra-African trade accounted
for only 10.5 per cent of total exports and 10.1 per cent of imports,
they noted.
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