Trade liberalisation alone will not boost growth and poverty reduction in Africa, says the United Nations (UN) in its Economic Report on Africa 2004 (ERA 2004), published by the UN’s Economic Commission for Africa and released on Wednesday.
Entitled Unlocking Africa’s Trade Potential, ERA 2004 argues that trade policies in many African countries have been applied haphazardly with too little relevance to overall development objectives.
Data from African countries that have liberalised their economies show that dynamic trade policies, alongside gradual and targeted liberalisation, are more effective than liberalisation per se.
The flagship report uses a competitiveness index developed by ECA that combines the economic and political environment, availability of direct inputs to production and state of infrastructure to provide insights into why development in Africa has fallen behind, compared to other regions.
Mauritius, South Africa, Namibia, and Tunisia are cited as Africa’s most competitive nations.
ERA 2004 analyses the collapse of the Doha talks and argues for a comprehensive approach to development that prioritises poverty alleviation.
It suggests that successful integration of Africa into the world economy will require better-educated and healthier workforces, improved economic and political governance, and better-quality infrastructure.
Reporting on the continent’s overall economic performance, ERA states that in 2003 Africa advanced to real GDP growth of 3,8%, compared to 3,2% in 2002.
This encouraging increase reflects Africa’s progress in a number of critical areas: the continent has continued to exhibit good macroeconomic fundamentals; fiscal deficits have been kept under control; inflation has largely stabilised; and the region’s current account deficit fell.
The challenge lies in translating these achievements into faster growth. In 2003, only five countries — Angola, Burkina Faso, Chad, Equatorial Guinea and Mozambique — achieved the 7% growth necessary to reach the millennium development goal of halving poverty by 2015.
According to the ERA 2004, the regional outlook for 2004 is positive with growth projected at 4,4%. However, there are several downside risks.
The recovery of the global economy is marred by significant international imbalances because of the United States’ large current account deficit, and the matching surplus concentrated in a few countries. According to the report, adjustment through sharp depreciation in the US dollar could interrupt the recovery.
The report also warns against protectionist sentiment, particularly in the form of cotton subsidies in the US and other industrial countries. These have damaged prospects for cotton-producing West African countries and further protectionist measures could seriously harm Africa in the medium-term, the report says. – I-Net Bridge