Cold Link Africa January / February 2020 | Page 34

FEATURE development and economic growth in the African economies. However, not all countries will benefit to the same extent, and the gain of welfare benefits also implicates relevant costs and commitments. South Africa’s highest ad valorem import duties are levied on imports of whole frozen chicken, prepared or preserved pineapples, and uncooked pasta not containing eggs, to name a few. Most of the benefits of further trade integration (i.e. welfare benefits from lower import prices, production efficiency and increase in outputs, higher value- added jobs and exports, technological specialisation, and so on) will materialise in the long term, while most of the associated costs of adjustment and integration (i.e. loss in trade tariff revenue, local SMEs vanishing in front of stronger competition, adjusting unemployment, required investment in infrastructure, political and regulatory reforms) will be incurred in the short term. Using the Global Trade Analysis Project (GTAP) computable general equilibrium (CGE) model, UNCTAD has estimated the quantitative effects of the CFTA according to two long-term scenarios: a full Free Trade Agreement (FTA) and Special Product Categorisation (SPC). A full Free Trade Agreement (FTA) eliminating all tariffs in the CFTA could generate welfare gains of USD16.1-billion (R236-billion), at the cost of USD4.1- billion (R60.3-billion) in trade revenue losses (representing 9.1% of current tariff revenues). GDP and employment are expected to grow by 0.97% and 1.17% respectively. Intra-African trade growth is estimated at 33% and the continent’s trade deficit is expected to drop by 50.9%. Because of lack of proper infrastructure, a small percentage of perishable products is imported and exported within the African borders. 34 www.coldlinkafrica.co.za INCORPORATING COLD CHAIN Although there are a lot of challenges related to trading continentally, the World Bank is optimistic that AfTCA is a good move. Special Product Categorisation (SPC) permanently exempts sensitive products from liberalisation. In a scenario in which the sector with the highest current tariff revenue would be exempted from liberalisation, UNCTAD simulations estimate a welfare gain of USD10.7- billion (R15.7-billion) in the long term. Tariff revenue losses are expected at USD3.2-billion (R4.7-billion), representing 7.2% of current tariff revenues. GDP and employment growth are expected to grow by 0.66% and 0.82% respectively. Intra-African trade is expected to grow by 24%, while, Africa’s trade deficit only shrinks by 3.8%. The agriculture sector is extremely relevant for the African economies since it employed about 53% of the continent’s labour force in 2016. Governments are worried about possible adverse impacts of the CFTA on the agriculture sector’s economic growth, which would massively affect employment across the continent. Even though the largest employment growth rates are found in manufacturing and services sectors, agriculture sub- sectors are also expected to grow. Despite the benefits projected, Khorommbi says that it is too early to “evaluate whether the agreement will be feasible or if it offers the economic prospects the African Union Commission claims it will yield considering the current transcontinental infrastructural position. Worthy of note is that, at present, there is a ‘basket’ of several multilateral, regional and bilateral trade agreements in sub- Saharan Africa, which have lowered trade tariffs among countries and regions. However, due to overlapping membership, some of these agreements are not yielding the envisioned economic and trade- related-outcomes”. There are several explanations for this state of affairs says tralac: the dependence of African economies on commodity production and exports, a lack of diversification resulting in a mismatch between supply and demand, tariffs and non-tariff barriers (NTBs), inefficient transport infrastructure, COLD LINK AFRICA • January/February 2020