East Africa fails to sign EPAs due to disagreements - 30 Jun 10
The signing of the Economic Partnership Agreements (EPAs)
between the East Africa Community and the European Commission has been
pushed to November.
Mr Silver Ojakol, the commissioner
International Trade at the ministry of Trade, announced at a meeting organized in Kampala last week by the Southern and Eastern African
Trade Information and Negotiations Institute (Seatini). Both the EU and
EAC referred the signing to November after failing to agree on article
15 and 16 in Dar el salaam, Tanzania.
The two articles limit EAC member states from instituting taxes on exports.
Export
taxes function as an important development tool that can be used for
revenue generation. But most importantly it can be used to create
incentives to add value to local products rather than exporting them in
their raw form; thus an instrument for promoting industrialization and
employment creation.
The agreements that seek the
creation of a free trade area between the EU and EAC, have come under
heavy criticism from Civil Society Organizations for being non
committal on sensitive issues like intellectual property rights and
movement of labor among others.
Mr Nathan Irumba,
the chief executive officer of Seatini told Daily Monitor on the
sidelines of the meeting that the pacts’ call for the 80 per cent liberalization is untenable since African firms cannot compete with the
largely industrialized Europe.
Liberalization vs growth
He
said: “Liberalization has to follow development and not the other way
round adding that all big economies opened their markets after reaching
a certain level of development.” Mr Irumba cautioned EAC member states
to be concerned by demands of extensive and premature liberalisation
policies being pushed by the European Union.
In recent
years, president Museveni has repeatedly voiced his aspiration to
transform Uganda from a peasant to an industrialised economy, which as
he says can only be achieved with improved trade both within and
outside the country.
Countries:None Specified
Source(s): The Daily Monitor
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