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Regional Economic Integration Continued: Brenton & Isik

This document discusses the need for and benefits of regional economic integration (REI) in Africa. Key points include: 1) REI can help distribute surplus food production, facilitate trade in basic manufactures as incomes rise, and create regional production chains to process raw materials locally. This could make trade more labor-intensive and higher-value. 2) Barriers like tariffs, rules of origin, export restrictions, and regulations increase trade costs and need reform. Simplifying cross-border trade for small traders could also help. 3) Intra-African trade is low but increasing integration could facilitate more trade in labor-intensive and higher-value goods. Regional differences in resources provide opportunities for

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
64 views26 pages

Regional Economic Integration Continued: Brenton & Isik

This document discusses the need for and benefits of regional economic integration (REI) in Africa. Key points include: 1) REI can help distribute surplus food production, facilitate trade in basic manufactures as incomes rise, and create regional production chains to process raw materials locally. This could make trade more labor-intensive and higher-value. 2) Barriers like tariffs, rules of origin, export restrictions, and regulations increase trade costs and need reform. Simplifying cross-border trade for small traders could also help. 3) Intra-African trade is low but increasing integration could facilitate more trade in labor-intensive and higher-value goods. Regional differences in resources provide opportunities for

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jkleinhans.jk
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Regional economic

integration continued
Brenton & Isik
Why the need for REI or cross border
trade
• Distribution of surplus production of staple foods
• Trade in basic manufactures (metal or plastic products) when incomes
are rising as World prices of these goods are higher or it is more costly
to import
• Regional production chains
• Raw materials can be processed here instead of exporting them…similar to
Asia issues
• Variety
• Untapped potential for exports (as inter regional trade is low)
Therefore a need to look at policy that
creates unnecessary barriers
• Simplifying cross border trade for small informal traders
• Aid with cross-border trade
• Reduce the amount of agencies at the border
• Increase professionalism of officials
• Support trade associations
• Non-tariff barriers removal (reduction in tariffs have not led to economic
development)
• Rules of origin
• Export bans
• Export and import licensing
• Reform regulations and immigration procedures
• To unlock the potential trade and investment in services
Composition of REI
trades
• Increase in trade with China
• Mostly primary commodities (low value added or capital intensive in nature)
• Still employment levels are dismal
• Need to move from these commodities to products which utilizes more people
• Maybe concentrate on improving conditions for informal firms and individuals by increasing
their opportunities to interact with the formal sector and by providng a path towards
formalization
• Low intra-regional trade
• If increased they are more likely to be labour intensive commodities traded
and more of a higher-valued nature when the intra-regional trade constraints
are relaxed for firms
• Could be increased by reducing the overlapping REI that exist… Different
trade regimes require different trade rules and increases costs as countries
need to adhere to multiple trade rules
• High transaction costs that exist in Africa
• The world has split its production into chains to reduce costs
• This has been aided by communication costs decreasing
Scope for cross border trade
• Similarity of endowments
• But does not affect agriculture due to the varying weather/seasons amongst African
countries
• Three quarters of the world output and there is an expectation that Africa’s food intake would
increase due to urbanization and its population growth
• Need therefore to address issues with small farm holdings who only receive 20% of the
market price for their products (issues of high transaction costs and poor harvest) reducing
the incentive to produce for the market.
• Lack of proper measurement of informal cross border trade
• Believe to be anywhere from 50-90% of formal flows…lots of untapped potential
• Basic manufacture sector growth as Africa develops
• These products are expensive to ship long distances
• Regional production chains
• Like Asia, Africa has inexpensive labour which provides a building bloc for a lower
cost destination for countries seeking to expand
• Movement away from specialisation in production and rather to efficiencies in
certain stages of production
• For instance RSA has the expertise, logistics and capital to compete globally while
smaller African countries could provide the cheap labour
• Therefore a need to remove restrictive trade barriers and restrictive policies
• Trade in services
• Uganda exporter of education service
• Nigeria financial institutions spread throughout the region where small countries
exists
• A need for cross border mobile banking to aid with payment services for informal
traders
Africa’s thick
borders
• More than 30 days to import and export goods across borders in SSA
• DRC-Rwanda (adding 1549km and 35hours)
• Table 1.1
Table 1s1 > Trading across Borders in SSA is Costly and Tin1e Consuming

US$ per co tainer cost


_,. to import
EAP 22.7 890 24.1 935

ECA 26.7 1,65 28.1 1,845


2 20.1 1,488
LAC 18.0
1,228 24.2 1,229
MEN 20.4
1,049 11.4 1,106
A 10.9
1,059 32.5 1,74
OECD 32.3 4
11,512
SS _...,.._.._.............- ........_
SAR 323. ....,,..--w_..._ _. ,. ,.
,....,._l+ft.......
,. _. ,._. ..,."" .,. _- -38- ·· - · 2,492
. . _,'.
A _960 2
• Table and examples show that costs of moving between borders is
high
• Transit times are uncertain and long

• Why?
• Large Infrastructure, transport, telecommunications and energy deficit
• About 20% of delay is infrastructure
• Rest is non-tariff barriers and poor trade facilitation
• Need therefore for both hard and soft (like regulatory reforms for quality
transport and logistics) infrastructure
• Costs of cross-border payments
• Lack or absent financial instruments and institutions
• High costs of exchanging currencies
• Carrying cash exposes traders to them or predatory behavior by officials
• There are new products and services introduced based on modern
technology to reduce transaction costs
• However, lack of interoperability resulting in market fragmentation
Removing non-tariff
barriers
• Impose unnecessary costs on producers that limit trade and increase prices
for consumers
• Reduces investments and brings about uncertainty in trade
• Therefore a need for establishing report mechanisms and monitoring
committees
• The idea is not to deregulate but rather to establish better regulation that
doesn’t compromise health standards but promotes regional competition
• So an inclusive (private investors too) and transparent approach is
needed with channels to dispute decisions made on regulations
• Common standards among African countries (harmonisation at regional
level)
Some more Examples of
NTBS
• Delays at borders raise costs
• Restrictive rules of origin limit preferential trade (onerous local
content requirements)
• Costs of certificates of origin
• Poorly designed technical regulations and standards
• Reliance on mandatory inspections and certifications
• National standards vs Regional standards
• NTBS that restrict opportunities for regional sourcing
• Trade permits, export taxes, import licensing
Concentration on manufacturing goods
• But what of services as a source of diversification
• As landlocked countries face high transport costs
• Services also aid growth
• Need to open services to trade
• Increase quality and reduce costs
• Reduce wastes, improve management and reduce operating costs
• Need to ensure trade liberalisation does not lead to transfer of ownership
from state monopoly to a private monopoly or national one to a foreign
monopoly
• Government intervention may be needed then
Some service issues/examples
• Lack of cross-border official payment systems
• Could be because of differences in regulatory framework for financial
institutions between countries in certain regions
• Lack of distributional services of a modern nature to allow small
farmers access to high value markets and accelerate the transition
form subsistence farming to market participation
•TRADE AND
POVERTY PAPER
SERIES 1:May 2015
RE
I
• Used to address growth and poverty issues
• To reduce poverty studies have shown a need to shift from low productivity to
high productivity activities within and across the agricultural, industry and
services
• Therefore a need for more structural approach as poverty is more likely a
resultant of low productivity
• So why linear integration
• Trade reforms have a positive impact on trade and growth with the benefits
eventually filtering into the poor segments of society
Linear model for Africa has faced several
limitations
• Weak regional trade and poverty figures
• Trade liberalization is seen as the most important aspect of it
• Assumes trade barriers is the main factor affecting regional trade
growth and eventual poverty reduction
• Example SACU
• Removal of trade barriers has only seen 7.5% intra-regional trade
• Assumes trade affects poverty but the reverse does not hold (one
directional)
• But does poverty not affect the ability of country to trade as for instance
productive capacities may be limited
Bigger issues than trade barriers and
differences from EU initial base
• High productive capacities of EU countries
• Infrastructure bottle necks (energy and transport) of Africa
• Institutional and structural foundations make it easier for EU
countries to integrate
• Weak links between regional organizations and national government
in Africa
• Therefore REI needs to be geared towards development (transformative
regionalism) than promote trade reforms
• Identify the most binding constraints of development and then ask how integration
can contribute in alleviating these constraints
• In term by addressing both trade reforms and transformation reforms the reduction
of poverty and inequality which occurs can further enhance trade
• Low productivity to high productivity activities (a reflection in higher real wages further aiding
poverty alleviation)
• This can only occur if transformative regionalism is strategic, coherent and
pragmatic (informed vision with steps to achieve it and indicators to
measure its progress)
• Government also needs to lead the process especially since the private sector cannot
provide effective leadership in all areas where integration is challenging
Transformative regionalism through Trading
Blocs
• Self read –ECOWAS/EAC/SADC transformative regionalism progress
Africa's way forward for transformative
regionalism
• Initially Africa has had several initiatives which have all failed
• IDDA I, First Industrial Development Decade,1982-1992
• IDDA II, Second, 1993-2002
• Alliance for Africa’s Industrialization, launched 1996
• Accelerated Productive Capacities Initiative, 2003/2004
• Accelerated Industrial Development of Africa (AIDA), 2008
• Don’t forget REI…SADC etc.
• Need to relook at REI process
• Yes have branched out into peace and security roles…but can leave that for
the African Union or other unions and concentrate on their main objectives
• Promote transformative regionalism as a rationale for REI as more
coherent integration agenda in Africa
• Allows more effective use of scarce financial and human resource
• Allows for alignment of strategies of the African Union with those of
national governments
• More pragmatic approach
• Realistic targets and deadlines
• Choice between markets vs states, export orientated vs import substitution,
agriculture versus industrial development…these choices are not as
independent as experience has shown
• Industrial policy needs to be geared to transformative regionalism
• At national level
• Investment to strategic sectors deemed important for structural change
• Unlock investment potential
• At regional level
• Coherence across industrial strategies and polices
• Industrial policy: government must provide support to entrepreneurs but also
challenge them to perform (enforced and established benchmarks)
• Consumer role
• African consumers tastes and patterns affect the type of good to be produced locally
and traded profitability by local entrepreneurs
• They need to appreciate and buy goods produced on the continent to create demand
• Need harness existing opportunities for industrial development…like
in agribusiness
• Nigerian example on tomatoes and tomato paste
• Need for large African developers to be driving forces
• Algeria, Egypt, Nigeria and RSA
• More active role
• Provision of finance and cross-border infrastructure
• Act as growth poles and promote development of regional production networks to
catalyze trade and investment for sustained development in Africa

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