Covid-19 a risk to smooth AfCFTA operation: AU

08 Jul, 2022 - 00:07 0 Views
Covid-19 a risk to smooth AfCFTA operation: AU

eBusiness Weekly

ADDIS ABABA. — The African Union (AU) on Tuesday said the advent of Covid-19 has posed the most formidable risk to the smooth operationalisation of the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) Agreement.

“Covid-19 pandemic has further heightened the risks of perpetuating the continent’s trade and business vulnerability,” the AU said in a statement on Tuesday ahead of an industrialisation-themed continental meeting.

It stressed that the Covid-19 pandemic and its attendant disruption of global supply chains have brought to the fore the urgency and significance of driving industrialisation in the African continent.
“More fundamentally, the pandemic has openly exposed the hollowness of African economies on several fronts, including the fragility and weakness of Africa’s industrial capabilities,” the AU said.

The AU, however, emphasised that while Covid-19 is creating a significant economic and health crisis, it also presents an invaluable opportunity for the continent to re-configure its development narrative toward prioritisation of initiatives that help accelerate Africa’s industrialisation.

And the development of strong regional and local value-chains can be a game-changer to build a resilient small and medium enterprises’ production capacity in the continent, to seize the business opportunities emanating from Covid-19-induced disruptions of global value chains.

Once fully implemented, the AfCFTA will create a single African market for goods and services, covering about 1,2 billion people with a combined Gross Domestic Product of more than US$2,5 trillion across 55 members.

The statement came ahead of the AU’s high-level industrialisation-themed continental summit, which will be held under the theme “Industrialising Africa: Renewed commitment towards an Inclusive and Sustainable Industrialisation and Economic Diversification,” slated for November 20 to 25 in Niamey, the capital of Niger.

According to the AU, industrialisation prospects for the continent are anchored on unleashing the growth of small and micro-enterprises (SMEs) guided by the African Union SMEs Strategy.
Trading under the AfCFTA agreement was launched in January 2021. Once fully implemented, the AfCFTA will create a single African market for goods and services, covering about 1,2 billion people with a combined Gross Domestic Product of more than 2,5 trillion US dollars across 55 members, according to the AU.

The upcoming summit will be convened as part of the Africa Industrialisation Week annual commemorative activities.

Given the importance of industrialisation and economic transformation in Africa, the 20th of every November is commemorated as Africa Industrialisation Day, adopted by the Assembly of Heads of State and Government of the Organisation of African Unity, the predecessor of the AU, in July
1989, in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. — Xinhua.

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