Now that trade under the AfCFTA has been delayed beyond the 1 July 2020 start date, what next for the Africa Continental Free Trade Area?
There is, of course, the view – in some quarters – that there was no need to have delayed the start date. Yes, there is the issue of covid-19 to contend with, but might that perhaps not have been a good opportunity to kickstart trading, rather than to postpone?
A good argument, especially considering the view of the AfCFTA Secretary General (in the webinar I referred to in this blog post) that the main way Africa would survive the economic impact of covid-19 would be by boosting intra-continental trade. In that case, one might argue, why then postpone the start date for AfCFTA trading?
Last week, the AfroChampions Initiative released its AfCFTA Year Zero Report. The Report, dated March 2020, actually counsels against postponing the kickoff date for AFCTA trading. Obviously by the time the report hit our screens last week, the postponement had already been announced.
While acknowledging the challenges to intra-African trade posed by covid-19, the Report also points to possible routes forward for AfCFTA trading in 2020, such as by focusing on facilitating trade in essential goods, such as food and pharmaceuticals.
And what about possible opportunities (for intra-African trading) created by the pandemic? Take, for example, the failure of global supply chains, which could create chances for supply chains within Africa. This point is clearly made in the Report, as well as in this article from the Brookings Institution. The same argument would apply also to manufacturing. Given the current pandemic-induced difficulties faced by global manufacturing, might there not be opportunities also here for African businesses?
And, of course, the digital economy. The exigencies of covid-19 have dragged us all online in a manner unprecedented. Thanks to the lockdown and the working-from-home measures instituted globally, we are witnessing digital transformation on a scale hitherto unimagined. Might there not be some opportunities, here and now, for boosting AfCFTA trading?
Thing is, we are not quite sure whether, and to what extent, the ratifying countries are even prepared for AfCFTA trading. I would suggest that this is, in fact, the main issue. The Year Zero Report makes a good attempt at gauging the preparedness of the ratifying countries, using specific criteria in making its assessments. The Report also proffers a helpful suggestion – that each ratifying country prepare a ‘covid-19-adjusted plan’, which would give us some idea of their preparedness for AfCFTA trading, taking into account the covid-19 disruptions. I think that this would bring us a good way closer to assessing the true preparedness of African countries to begin trading under the AfCFTA.