CHALLENGES
“
AT THE BORDER
”
183
with Africa or the expansion of existing preferences (or both. But these are second- or third-best approaches, and great caution should be exercised. In light of the risks of creating incentives for trade diversion, the contours of such schemes
need to be carefully designed, such as with respect to rules of origin, and they need to be made complementary and mutually reinforcing with other structural and institutional economic reforms.
At the same time, African countries should review their commitments to implementing realistic and substantive regional integration schemes.
Rationalizing and harmonizing the spaghetti bowl of existing bilateral and regional agreements is clearly needed if they are to accomplish their stated objective, especially because many businesses operating in Africa question the utility of the current arrangements.
The roles of African IPAs and public-private investors councils could be strengthened to proactively promote FDI opportunities and eliminate bottlenecks for foreign investors. This would require the allocation of more resources to such institutions. Still, IPAs are most effective when operating in an environment with a good investment climate. Countries that do not have these conditions in place should focus on improving them first.
By the same token, export and investment incentives appear to be effective only in certain cases where the requisite institutional and governance capacity exists.
Overall, achieving the desirable outcomes hoped for by implementing trade policy reforms will not come only from such actions. While those reforms are necessary to foster trade flows between Africa and Asia, they are not sufficient for trade to leverage growth. Indeed, as suggested by the analysis in chapter 2 and from the assessments contained in the various
DTIS diagnostics, relieving domestic supply-side constraints matters a great deal. Thus, for example, while Asian escalating tariffs distort the contours
of some African exports, it is the lack of, or the inefficiency in, African countries domestic production capacity that is likely more critical.
Share with your friends: