African countries
seeking to reduce the cost, time and complexity of interregional and
international trade in goods are gathered for the First African Forum
for National Trade Facilitation Committees in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
The event, organised by UNCTAD and seven partner organizations, comes as Africa scales up its trade easing efforts after the World Trade Organisation’s Trade Facilitation Agreement entered into force in February 2017 and as it prepares to implement the Africa Continental Free Trade Agreement (AfCFTA) signed in March 2018.
“The World Trade Organization calculates that current trade costs for developing countries are equivalent to applying a staggering 219 per cent tariff on international trade, and this hurts Africa,” UNCTAD Secretary-General Mukhisa Kituyi said.
“UNCTAD has supported Africa’s work on trade facilitation for decades, including with our ASYCUDA automated customs systems, and capacity building programmes. The culmination of this work is to support the institutions that can make trade work for all, and National Trade Facilitation Committees must become the agents of change to boost international trade for developing countries.”
A central cog of the Trade Facilitation Agreement is the obligation of each country to set up a National Trade Facilitation Committee (NTFC), with public and private sector stakeholders “to facilitate both domestic coordination and implementation of the provisions of this agreement”.
With well-functioning NTFCs, countries will be able to make trade easier, faster and cheaper. For developing countries, and especially least developed countries – the majority of which are in sub-Saharan Africa – full implementation of the Trade Facilitation Agreement could lead to a reduction in trade costs of up to 15 per cent.
Win-win for all
Correctly implemented trade facilitation measures not only boost trade but also improve revenue collection, safety and security compliance controls (for example, improving food safety) and can help to streamline government agencies.
Such reforms help small cross-border traders, often women, enter the formal sector, make economic activities more transparent and accountable, promote good governance, generate better quality employment, strengthen information technology capabilities and generally modernize societies by bringing about benefits related to administrative efficiency.
These reforms are a prerequisite for developing countries to join global value chains and start trading out of poverty.
Trade facilitation reforms are also positive steps towards human, enterprise and institutional development, and link to achieving the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, making their enactment a win-win for all.
But for these benefits to be realized it is essential that the Trade Facilitation Agreement is implemented as foreseen.
According to the WTO, the rate of implemented commitments under the agreement as of October 2018 stood at 60 per cent – but broken down by level of development a new picture emerges, with developed countries having achieved 100 per cent of commitments, developing countries having achieved 60 per cent of commitments and least developed countries just 22 per cent of commitments.
Anticipating this, the Trade Facilitation Agreement contains important and novel provisions on so-called special and differential treatment that allow developing countries to choose their own implementation schedules – and get implementation assistance if needed.
“By coming together to share experience, learn lessons on common challenges, and meet with development partners, participants at this event will be equipped to redouble their trade facilitation efforts,” Shamika N. Sirimanne, director of UNCTAD’s division on technology and logistics, said.
“The forum is the result of close collaboration between multilateral and international organisations and is supported by several bilateral donors. The alliance showcases the collaborative effort of these institutions and donors to assist in moving forward opportunities for developing and least developed countries to integrate into globalised trade,” she added.
Topics covered during the three-day event include the role of African regional organizations, the role of NTFCs in the implementation of trade facilitation provisions in the AfCFTA, paperless initiatives at entry points, the involvement of the private sector in NTFCs, how to coordinate border agencies, and the role of transit corridors.
There will also be sessions on the gender dimension in cross-border trade, and the application of digital technologies in future modes of trading at a time when e-commerce becomes ever more important in international trade.
Xinhua
The event, organised by UNCTAD and seven partner organizations, comes as Africa scales up its trade easing efforts after the World Trade Organisation’s Trade Facilitation Agreement entered into force in February 2017 and as it prepares to implement the Africa Continental Free Trade Agreement (AfCFTA) signed in March 2018.
“The World Trade Organization calculates that current trade costs for developing countries are equivalent to applying a staggering 219 per cent tariff on international trade, and this hurts Africa,” UNCTAD Secretary-General Mukhisa Kituyi said.
“UNCTAD has supported Africa’s work on trade facilitation for decades, including with our ASYCUDA automated customs systems, and capacity building programmes. The culmination of this work is to support the institutions that can make trade work for all, and National Trade Facilitation Committees must become the agents of change to boost international trade for developing countries.”
A central cog of the Trade Facilitation Agreement is the obligation of each country to set up a National Trade Facilitation Committee (NTFC), with public and private sector stakeholders “to facilitate both domestic coordination and implementation of the provisions of this agreement”.
With well-functioning NTFCs, countries will be able to make trade easier, faster and cheaper. For developing countries, and especially least developed countries – the majority of which are in sub-Saharan Africa – full implementation of the Trade Facilitation Agreement could lead to a reduction in trade costs of up to 15 per cent.
Win-win for all
Correctly implemented trade facilitation measures not only boost trade but also improve revenue collection, safety and security compliance controls (for example, improving food safety) and can help to streamline government agencies.
Such reforms help small cross-border traders, often women, enter the formal sector, make economic activities more transparent and accountable, promote good governance, generate better quality employment, strengthen information technology capabilities and generally modernize societies by bringing about benefits related to administrative efficiency.
These reforms are a prerequisite for developing countries to join global value chains and start trading out of poverty.
Trade facilitation reforms are also positive steps towards human, enterprise and institutional development, and link to achieving the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, making their enactment a win-win for all.
But for these benefits to be realized it is essential that the Trade Facilitation Agreement is implemented as foreseen.
According to the WTO, the rate of implemented commitments under the agreement as of October 2018 stood at 60 per cent – but broken down by level of development a new picture emerges, with developed countries having achieved 100 per cent of commitments, developing countries having achieved 60 per cent of commitments and least developed countries just 22 per cent of commitments.
Anticipating this, the Trade Facilitation Agreement contains important and novel provisions on so-called special and differential treatment that allow developing countries to choose their own implementation schedules – and get implementation assistance if needed.
“By coming together to share experience, learn lessons on common challenges, and meet with development partners, participants at this event will be equipped to redouble their trade facilitation efforts,” Shamika N. Sirimanne, director of UNCTAD’s division on technology and logistics, said.
“The forum is the result of close collaboration between multilateral and international organisations and is supported by several bilateral donors. The alliance showcases the collaborative effort of these institutions and donors to assist in moving forward opportunities for developing and least developed countries to integrate into globalised trade,” she added.
Topics covered during the three-day event include the role of African regional organizations, the role of NTFCs in the implementation of trade facilitation provisions in the AfCFTA, paperless initiatives at entry points, the involvement of the private sector in NTFCs, how to coordinate border agencies, and the role of transit corridors.
There will also be sessions on the gender dimension in cross-border trade, and the application of digital technologies in future modes of trading at a time when e-commerce becomes ever more important in international trade.
Xinhua
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