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The UK must do all it can to keep trade out of Africa flowing

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The UK must do all it can to keep trade out of Africa flowing

The UK must do all it can to keep trade out of Africa flowing
Africa would not be jumping for joy in the event of increased economic protectionism. Photo credit: AP | Leon Neal

The increasing calls for more economic protectionism spell disaster for Africa – and the UK must use its new freedom to rebut them 

Covid-19 has now spread to all corners of Africa and, as the rate of infections increase, the continent's economies are coming to a crashing halt, risking the reversal of two decades of economic progress.

Trade has been the heartbeat of Africa's economic success, with the UK alone importing £12.7bn in goods and services from Africa in 2016, much of which from the agriculture sector. But this vital economic activity, and the millions of livelihoods it sustains, is under threat.

Trade volumes in the East African Community are down by up to 25pc since the beginning of 2020, with even worse damage in the informal sector. There are warnings of a food security disaster on the continent.

The threat is not only from Covid-19 itself. As Dr Dirk Willem te Velde, of the Overseas Development Institute, explains: "Some in the UK – and other large economies around the world – are arguing for autarky or increasingly protectionist policies that would wreak havoc on trade with Africa, often disguised as well-meaning social and environmental objectives, or attempts to protect domestic businesses and jobs. These protectionist voices must be resisted."

Policymakers must understand the full consequences if stringent new production standards are imposed on imports, as some in the UK are calling for.

Proxy export embargo

Exports from much of Africa would be effectively locked out from the UK and their other major markets around the world, leading to countless jobs being lost on the continent where unemployment rates are already as high as 70pc. At the same time, British consumers would be denied goods such as Kenyan tea and green beans, or Ghanaian cocoa and fruit.

There are no winners in this situation. When G20 Trade and Investment Ministers met virtually, at the instigation of UK trade secretary Liz Truss, they agreed to do everything possible to keep trade flowing across the world and ensure that any necessary emergency measures taken to tackle Covid-19 do not create unnecessary barriers to trade or disruption to supply chains.

As encouraging as this sounds, unless these pledges are actually fortified into the global trading system, it is too easy for governments to pledge one thing publicly, only for the policy to be ignored in favour of more protectionist measures driven by domestic public pressures.

Using its new independent voice at the WTO, which has forecast stunted trade growth, the UK should lead a call to action focused on three areas.

The UK response

First, the UK must continue to lead by example and hold all other members of the G20 to their promise not to erect unnecessary trade barriers. The WTO is one forum to do this, as the multilateral trading system already has well-established rules and surveillance systems. African countries can be supported to raise their concerns and analyse potential impacts of trade barriers.

Second, the UK should leverage its world-class aid infrastructure and long-standing partnerships with African countries to put in place rapidly schemes to ensure African supply chains are safe and kept open. A key asset here is TradeMark East Africa (TMEA), established by the UK a decade ago and now a leading player on trade and development in Africa.

TMEA has announced the launch of a $20m (£16m) Safe Trade Emergency Facility, providing short to medium term measures in support of continued trade. This will help contain Covid-19, while still enabling trade to flow. The UK and other aid agencies must now channel more funding urgently to this type of initiative, so that they can be quickly scaled-up across the continent.

Finally, the UK should intensify its dialogue with Africa to plan for returning to a prosperous, more resilient, future. This can be done by establishing a UK-Africa Prosperity Commission to chart out the future direction for a new economic partnership covering safe trade, green investment and technology, and aid for trade.

Bringing together UK government ministers with African governments and the African Union, as well as those at the forefront of existing initiatives working to boost economic activity on the continent, the Commission would examine how the UK and Africa can "build-backbetter" after the Covid-19 pandemic.

Around the world, one billion people have been lifted out of extreme poverty since 1990, as a direct result of international trade. The global trading system that has helped deliver this was already under threat, but since the outbreak of the Covid-19 pandemic, the importance of safe, free and fair global trade has never been greater.

We must act now to keep trade with Africa flowing. Lives depend upon it.

Tom Pengelly is director of the Secretariat for the UK all-party parliamentary group for trade out of poverty, and member of the tralac Advisory Board

Erastus Mwencha is the former secretary-general of the Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa and former deputy chairman of the African Union Commission

This article originally appeared in The Telegraph and has been republished here with permission.


tralac COVID-19 Resources Page

Our COVID-19 Resources page features news, analysis and resources on the impact of the Coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic in African countries, including the trade and trade-related measures being adopted by African countries and communications from the regional economic communities (RECs) and the African Union in response to COVID-19.

Click here to find out more.

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