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Perspectives of the Donor Community and International Organisations on the Aid for Trade Initiative

Africa Trade Policy Centre UNECA Workshop on Trade Facilitation and Aid for Trade UNECA Conference Centre, Addis Ababa, 12-13 March 2009. Perspectives of the Donor Community and International Organisations on the Aid for Trade Initiative. Dan Lui

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Perspectives of the Donor Community and International Organisations on the Aid for Trade Initiative

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  1. Africa Trade Policy Centre UNECA Workshop on Trade Facilitation and Aid for TradeUNECA Conference Centre, Addis Ababa, 12-13 March 2009 Perspectives of the Donor Community and International Organisations on the Aid for Trade Initiative Dan Lui Programme Officer – Economic and Trade Cooperation European Centre for Development Policy Management

  2. Aid for Trade: Origins and Definitions • WTO Doha Round: Hong Kong Ministerial 2005 • WTO Taskforce recommendations mid-2006 • Additional, predictable, sustainable and effective financing + Paris Declaration principles • 6 categories: Trade policy and regulations; Trade development; Building productive capacity; Trade-related infrastructure; Trade adjustment; other • Work by WTO/OECD with donors on measuring AfT • Invitation to DCs to identify their A4T needs

  3. The AfT Debate in Context • ‘AfT’ means different things to different stakeholders! • support for trade liberalisation and reform (EPAs)? • regional integration… or into international markets? • a chance to refocus aid to trade concerns? • especially less popular areas such as Customs, SPS • a chance for better aid? • e.g. better ownership and delivery; coherence from donors; new approaches to finance; more strategic approaches to trade devt • an increase in resources? (…or more ‘empty promises’?) • Risks exist in current economic climate: will donors simply re-label existing aid as AfT? (Does this matter?) • Success for developing countries depends on seizing the agenda: taking a proactive but practical approach

  4. EU Response: The EU Joint AfT Strategy • Adopted in October 2007 as a practical response to AfT agenda: • Commitment of €2bn per year ‘Trade Related Assistance’ by 2010 (€1bn EC, €1bn Member States) • EU also a big donor in other AFT areas (e.g. infrastructure) • Many principles, but the approach is open to interpretation? • Questions on operationalising the strategy: • Existing or new bilateral programmes; EC-led ‘regional packages’ and RIPs; multilateral programmes? • What to support? How to engage and identify ACP needs in a way that avoids either ‘shopping lists’ or loss of ownership? • At what level (national/regional/local?): possibility of undermining national-level donor coordination processes?

  5. Linkages to new EPAs • A particular preoccupation of both EU and ACP countries has been the linkage between AfT and Economic Partnership Agreements • Most ACP regions see some linkage between AfT and EPAs: • Costs of implementation (e.g. fiscal adjustment, economic adjustment, competition regimes, intellectual property) • Taking advantage of EPA opportunities (e.g. building productive capacity, sector-specific programmes, trade facilitation) • Opportunities to deepen regional integration • But …different EU and ACP stakeholders place different emphasis on EPA linkages and still confusion about the relationship • this is covered in ECDPM discussion paper on AfT

  6. Critical Questions in ACP • ACP have sometimes been criticised for not coming up with workable concrete proposals… yet face important practical considerations, including: • is any new funding actually available? • scope of AfT requests …what is possible? • problems of internal coordination and prioritisation (both at national and regional level) • regional element: how to structure their AfT programmes to reconcile national strategies with a regional approach? • what do donors want from ACP requests or needs assessment exercises… little common understanding on this • what is best way to engage donors?

  7. Critical Issues for Donors • What to fund? • how to engage and identify ACP needs in a way that avoids ‘shopping lists’ or loss of ownership? How to ensure integration and coherence with existing national strategies/plans/priorities? • How to fund? • Existing or new bilateral programmes? Co-financing? New ‘regional packages’? Multilateral programmes? • At what level (national/regional/local)? Regional funds: are they supported, what is needed to make these work? • How to coordinate/establish division of labour? Geographical focus, sector, AfT category; with other donors incl. private sector? • Different approaches in different categories? • What’s the process of matching AfT ‘demand’ and ‘supply’ (existing channels, AfT conferences in ACP regions, lead donors, etc?) • How to meet expectations on AfT?

  8. Moving ‘from Concepts to Practical Action’ AfT represents on opportunity but new efforts needed on… • Clarifying remaining confusions: – e.g. nature and scope of (additional) support, delivery mechanisms, donor division of labour in different ACP regions • Defining what to support? • ACP ‘needs assessments’: work needed on agreed methodologies, prioritisation, without sacrificing ownership? • Strategic approaches in AfT? Linkages across AfT categories? • ACP capacity to develop and implement projects? • How to implement, and on what level(s)? – Donor responses to AfT; ACP responses to AfT – Bringing ACP recipients and donors together!

  9. For more information: www.acp-eu-trade.org www.ecdpm.org ECDPM O.L. Vrouweplein, 21 NL – 6211 HE Maastricht The Netherlands Dan Lui dlu@ecdpm.org Tel. +31-43-350 29 00 Fax +31-43-350 29 02

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