1 / 22

Economic Partnership Agreements: A new approach to ACP-EU economic and trade cooperation

Economic Partnership Agreements: A new approach to ACP-EU economic and trade cooperation Claude Maerten, European Commission Head of Unit TRADE C 2 (claude.maerten@cec.eu.int) TRALAC’s Annual International Trade Law Conference 11 November 2004. BACKGROUND.

tad-deleon
Download Presentation

Economic Partnership Agreements: A new approach to ACP-EU economic and trade cooperation

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. Economic Partnership Agreements: A new approach to ACP-EU economic and trade cooperation Claude Maerten, European Commission Head of Unit TRADE C 2 (claude.maerten@cec.eu.int) TRALAC’s Annual International Trade Law Conference 11 November 2004

  2. BACKGROUND

  3. EU Trade relations with ACP countries still the same since Lomé I (1975)A need for changeAgreed in ACP-EU Cotonou AgreementWHY ?

  4. EU Trade relations with ACP countries Since Lomé I (1975) Non reciprocal trade preferences All industrial goods enter the EU duty free 80% of agricultural products enter the EU duty free, and the remaining 20% benefit from preferences DID IT WORK ?

  5. EU Trade relations with ACP countries Since Lomé I (1975) NO, few successful stories Fisheries, Agriculture, Commodities; Mauritius, Kenya, Cameroon, Ivory Coast, Zimbabwe; Same trade relationship during the last 30 years in a new world economic environment

  6. EU Trade relations with ACP countries Since Lomé I (1975) Trade preferences had been eroded considerably (Kennedy Round, Tokyo round, Uruguay Round), and more to come with DDA In the 80s, margin of preference around 10% Today, lower than 4% in comparison with MFN, 2% in comparison with GS Not enough in the past Not a solution for the future

  7. Quick look at the data

  8. Quick look at the data Lack of ACP export diversification 5 PRODUCTS = 60 % of total Exports (petroleum, diamonds, cocoa, fish, and wood products) AFRICAN COUNTRIES REPRESENT 60 % OF TOTAL ACP EXPORT Lome trade regime as a tool to promote exports failed

  9. Lessons learnt • Unilateral Preferences are Not Enough • Trade relationship should go beyond market access • Promote a synergy between aid and trade • Mainstream trade in development support • Need for domestic reforms • Develop supply capacities • WTO compatibility

  10. RATIONALE FOR EPAS

  11. Towards a new approach The Cornerstones of EPAs • EU policies • The Cotonou Agreement • Development dimension • Regional integration • WTO compatibility

  12. EU Policies • Trade Policy • Contribute to growth, employment and competitiveness in Europe • Multilateral route the top priority; Complete the Doha round • Deepen bilateral and regional trade relations; regional integration • Development policy • The 6 priorities • CAP, Fisheries policy • EPA as a link for EU-ACP partnership

  13. The Cotonou Agreement • Objectives • Sustainable development • Poverty eradication • Integration into the global economy • EPA is the trade chapter

  14. Development dimension • Monterey consensus • sustainable, stable, transparent domestic policies in the South; • Market Access granted by developed countries • Mainstream trade policies in development strategies • PRSP, Integrated Framework, EU development policy; CSP; NIP and RIP • Trade and Aid • Coherence; Complementarity; Coordination • (PRSP, Integrated Framework, EU development policy; CSP; NIP and RIP) • Supply capacities; private sector development, … • Funding • Market access and Rules • Complementarity, parallelism between DDA, EPA

  15. Regional integration • Support ACP political choices (coherence, AU) • First step towards gradual integration into world economy • Enlarging markets for attracting investment • Combined South-South-North cooperation (lock-in effects)

  16. WTO Compatibility • Lome/Cotonou waiver • Price to pay against ACP interests • Enabling clause • Link between the level of RI and the level of our ambitions • Article XXIV GATT • Existing flexibility enough • The debate • Article V GATS • Meaning of WTO +

  17. WTO Compatibility Possible scenarios for reciprocity • West Africa 81% • Central Africa 79% • East and Southern Africa 80% • Southern Africa 76% • Caribbean 83% • Pacific 67%

  18. Conclusion • ACP development is the objective; Trade is a tool • Regional integration as a political, economic and development challenge • EPAs are an opportunity

More Related