1 / 14

Assessing Trade Development Needs and Integrating them into

Assessing Trade Development Needs and Integrating them into the Design of Development Strategies: Experiences from East and Southern Africa Symposium on Evaluation Identifying Indicators for Monitoring Aid for Trade WTO, Geneva 15-16 September 2008 Mark Pearson RTFP Programme Director.

dara-burke
Download Presentation

Assessing Trade Development Needs and Integrating them into

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. Assessing Trade Development Needs and Integrating them into the Design of Development Strategies: Experiences from East and Southern Africa Symposium on Evaluation Identifying Indicators for Monitoring Aid for Trade WTO, Geneva 15-16 September 2008 Mark Pearson RTFP Programme Director

  2. Poverty Alleviation through Economic Growth Domestic Fiscal Policies Increased levels of Trade Financial Policies • Market Access: • DFQFMA for LDCs • Improved Rules of Origin • Preference Margins • etc • Removal of Production and Competitive Constraints: • Aid for Trade • Foreign Direct Investment • Regulatory Environment • etc

  3. Aid for Trade • Trade Policy and Regulation • Trade facilitation and regulation • TA/CB • RTAs/FTAs/CU • Building Productive Capacity • Expansion of productive base • Level of investment • Trade Related Adjustment • changes in structure of trade • Trade Related Infrastructure • transit/transport • Energy • ICT • Trade Development • Trade Facilitation • Investment Promotion • Trade Financing, …

  4. What to Monitor and Evaluate at the Programme or Project Level? Sequencing: It is not enough to monitor spending, or rates of return or efficiency gains on individual projects – there is a need to monitor the sequencing of interventions.

  5. Lack of rolling stock and poor management on TAZARA - delays in transport – One train load of copper cathods is valued at about US$10.5m (50 tonnes per wagon, US$7,000/t, 30 wagons in a train). Lost income at 8% pa interest is about US$16,000/week/train.

  6. Container terminal congestion at Dar es Salaam. Improved efficiencies on the road/rail transport network will add to this bottleneck

  7. SENA line from Moatize (estimated deposit of 2.4 billion tonnes of coal) to Beira upgraded to transport coal but Beira port needs dredging and line into Malawi not repaired

  8. Improving customs procedures at Kasumbalesa ON ITS OWN will not reduce transport times and costs to an from Kolwezi – approximately 100 loaded trucks a day go south and 300 loaded trucks a day go north.

  9. The absolute Importance of Correct Sequencing Ring Road – US$1m/km One-Stop Border Post – buildings, computers, etc US$10m Start of journey Toll Bridge US$3m OSBP Road construction – US$1m/km Port Upgrade – Dredging, New container terminal, management system. – US$30m Road rehabilitation – 50mm surface overlay – US$750,000/km Trade Facilitation and Trade Regulation Measures

  10. The absolute Importance of Correct Sequencing Ring Road – US$1m/km One-Stop Border Post – buildings, computers, etc US$10m Start of journey Toll Bridge US$3m OSBP ROAD NOT FIXED – NO WAY TO PORT Port Upgrade – Dredging, New container terminal, management system. – US$30m Road rehabilitation – 50mm surface overlay – US$750,000/km Trade Facilitation and Trade Regulation Measures

  11. What to Monitor and Evaluate at the Programme or Project Level? Inter-Relations: What effects improvements in one sector have on another – for example, deregulation of the road sector without an effective regulatory environment and equivalent deregulation on the railways will not lead to more efficient transport and transit networks in the medium to longer term. The regional axle load limit is one of the highest in the world (56t for 7 axle rig) and overloading makes road transporters more competitive and profitable. Road transport accounts for almost all transport – even bulk transport of concentrates, fuel, sulphuric acid, etc.

  12. Programme-level Monitoring and Evaluation

  13. Way Forward: • Identification of projects and programmes that are necessary to make the N-S corridor more efficient with the aim of reducing costs and so allowing producers to be more efficient. • Calculate costs of projects and returns on investment. • Prepare a funding strategy for each project and programme (ring-fence using SPVs) so that they can be implemented in a sequenced manner. • Hold a “Aid for Trade” session in first quarter of 2009 to get funding of each project/programme. • Roll out to other corridors.

  14. Thank You Regional Trade Facilitation Programme (DFID) PO Box 317 Persequor Park Pretoria 0020 South Africa www.rtfp.org mpearson@rtfp.org

More Related