1 / 15

Focus

Focus. Regionalism and North Africa. RTAs and Regionalism. There has been a proliferation of Regional Trade Agreements (RTAs) RTAs are the mechanism through which regional integration is advanced Bilateral, sub-regional, regional and inter-regional scales

aiko
Télécharger la présentation

Focus

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Focus Regionalism and North Africa

  2. RTAs and Regionalism There has been a proliferation of Regional Trade Agreements (RTAs) • RTAs are the mechanism through which regional integration is advanced • Bilateral, sub-regional, regional and inter-regional scales • North-North, North-South and South-South in scope

  3. Types of exchange in RTAs • Merchandise (movement of goods) Preferential tariffs, harmonised external tariffs • Services (movement of labour) Facilitated temporary immigration, mutual recognition, harmonised standards • Investment (movement of capital) Privatisation, regulatory reform, competition policy ‘Shallow integration’ ‘Deep integration’

  4. Within the region (regional i.e., intra-regional) Scales of exchange • With other countries / regions (inter-regional) • With the world (multilateral) ... MTS (i.e., WTO) ‘Wide Integration’ ‘Open Regionalism’

  5. Investment Level of liberalisation Services Merchandise What level of liberalisation ? Varies by sector (and mode) ? What is optimal ? RegionOther RegionsWorld Scale

  6. Motivations Advantages of RTAs over the MTS • Literature suggests significant gains (much more than RTAs on merchandise alone) • More easily negotiated between limited set of participants with similar levels of development, geographical proximity and cultural ties • Allow for regional specificity • Allow for a greater degree of reciprocity • Reduce free-rider problem

  7. Motivations Advantages of RTAs over the MTS • Allow for greater liberalisation of temporary movement of services suppliers • Often include cooperative mechanisms for building institutional and infrastructural capacity At the same time RTAs complement the MTS • Facilitating the transition to multilateral liberalisation by strengthening indigenous supply capacities and regulatory effectiveness

  8. North African Initiatives Regional • UMA • Agadir • GAFTA Inter-Regional • EuroMed, European Neigborhood (North-South) • GSTP (South-South)

  9. North African Initiatives • All have focused on liberalising merchandise trade • Results have not met expectations Intra-regional trade remains weak ~ 3 % of total merchandise trade • Deeper integration liberalising services trade and investment remains to be advanced It can generate dynamic gains needed to boost intra-regional merchandise trade, including by improving access to and efficiency of producer services (... increased export competitiveness)

  10. Experiences in other regions South-South RTAs on services : An element of developing countries’ development strategies ANDEAN MERCOSUR CARICOM Of 153 RTAs operational today, 43 are economic integration agreements in services notified under GATS Article V ASEAN SADC

  11. Possible Next steps for North Africa • Define a region for deeper integration (UMA, ECA-NA, GAFTA, EuroMed, ... ) • Promote regional trade and investment through trade facilitation and regulatory reform • Ensure preference margins for the region to avoid the ‘hub and spoke’ effect and attract regional investment • Identify sectors where the region has a strong potential to enhance supply capacity through preferential treatment and a unified industrial policy in an RTA

  12. Possible Next steps for North Africa • Negotiate progressive multilateral liberalisation to allow time for the development of regional capacities • Identify sectors where the region has a weak potential to enhance supply capacity on its own and where extra-regional investment through inter-regional and multilateral liberalisation is desirable • Identify sectors where participation in production chains can be enhanced through inter-regional and multilateral agreements

  13. Assistance from UNCTAD Working closely with ECA and other international organisations, UNCTAD is ready to assist with: • Sectoral analyses and assessments of optimal scale of liberalisation • Elaboration of regional agreements on services and investment • Regulatory reform and competition policy • WTO accession (Algeria, Libya, Sudan) • WTO negotiations, and in particular GATS negotiations UNCTAD actively supports and provides capacity building under the Aid-for-Trade Initiative

  14. Thank you for your attention.

More Related