CHALLENGES
“
AT THE BORDER
”
135
Korea
Indonesia
Malaysia
Singapore
Rest of Asia
African countries
LDC
Non-LDC
LDC
Non-LDC
LDC
Non-LDC
LDC
Non-LDC
LDC
Non-LDC
10 29 5
5 0
1 0
0 10 11 2
15 5
5 0
0 0
10 19 146 2
1 0
0 0
0 0
2 1
5 5
5 2
0 0
1 1
3 4
8 2
0 0
19 7
7 5
5 0
7 0
0 7
5 0
3 4
3 0
2 0
0 1
1 0
6 7
8 1
4 0
0 11 28 0
8 11 10 2
7 0
0 14 12 0
4 5
Product-Specific Analysis of Chinese and Indian Tariffs on African Products Detailed product-specific analysis
of some of the highest tariffs, specifically those on food, inedible crude materials, and chemicals, shows that although they are applied to a small number of products, in fact they drive up the average tariff rates for African exports (table 3.4).
For China, the high tariff on crude materials is a result of the high tariff on cotton. For
India, the high tariffs on food, crude materials, and chemicals are the result of high tariffs on cashew nuts, cotton, scrap metals, and phosphorus pen- toxide and acids.
Tariff Escalation in Asia on Key African Exports Asia’s tariff structure consists of many peaks and escalations. When higher tariffs are imposed on more processed products to retain higher value- added activities in the domestic market, and raw materials not locally available face lower tariffs, this allows the domestic industry to access
03-Chap3:03-Chap3 10/10/06 10:08 AM Page 135
136
AFRICA
’
S SILK ROAD
:
CHINA
AND INDIA’
S NEW ECONOMIC FRONTIER 2
4 6
8 10 12 14 16 18 0
2 4
6 8
10 12
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