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Agriculture offers real growth potential

Although structural impediments such as poor logistics render the search for new avenues of deeper intra-African trade challenging‚ there is an immediate and compelling growth potential in the trade of agricultural products‚ Standard Bank research analyst Simon Freemantle said last week.
Agriculture offers real growth potential

"Here even basic improvements in the continent's trade‚ storage and transport infrastructure‚ coupled with ongoing initiatives to elevate agricultural productivity‚ have the ability to reap immediate‚ and potentially huge gains‚" he said.

According to the African Union (AU)‚ intra-African agricultural trade has accounted for an average of one-fifth of Africa's total agricultural trade for the past five years. This compared with an average in the European Union of 78%‚ and an Asian average of 60%. In some areas‚ Africa's deficit is even more pronounced: in 2011‚ just 3% of all African cereal imports originated on the continent.

"Much of the broader cereals shortage is accounted for by a deficit in rice production on the continent: though African countries produced just 3.5% of the world's rice in 2011‚ they were responsible for 35% of global rice imports for the year‚" he said.

Freemantle noted that elevated yields and improved transport and storage infrastructure could immediately improve regional food trade networks.

The World Bank predicted that‚ should West Africa manage to achieve its potential agricultural yields and open regional markets‚ its current US$2bn trade deficit in staple foods could convert into a US$12bn surplus.

World Bank report

Last year‚ a World Bank report showed how African countries are losing out on billions of dollars in potential trade every year because of high trade barriers with neighbouring countries It also showed that it was often easier for Africa to trade with the rest of the world than with its neighbouring countries.

The cross-border production networks that have spurred economic dynamism in other regions‚ especially East Asia‚ have yet to materialise in Africa.

African leaders have called for a continental free trade area by 2017 to boost trade within the continent.

Trade and regional integration are core elements of the World Bank's new Africa strategy‚ launched in March 2011‚ to help countries create opportunities for transformation and sustained growth.

While there has been some success in removing import duties within regional communities‚ a range of non-tariff and regulatory barriers still raise transaction costs and limit the movement of goods‚ services‚ people and capital across borders.

The World bank points out that effective regional integration is of particular importance now. While uncertainty surrounds the global economy and stagnation is likely to continue in traditional markets of Europe and North America‚ enormous opportunities for cross-border trade within Africa in food products‚ basic manufactured and services remain unexploited.

Poverty reduction

It says such trade is essential for welfare and poverty reduction‚ since poor people‚ and especially women‚ are intensively engaged in the informal production and trading of the goods and services that are actually crossing African borders.

Allowing these traders to flourish and then gradually integrate them into the formal economy would boost trade and the private sector base for future growth and development.

Freemantle highlighted that SA's agricultural trade with the rest of Africa provided evidence of both deficits and dormant opportunities underlying intra-African agricultural commerce.

Of SA's $1.2bn cereals imports last year‚ just 1.5% came from the rest of Africa. Of total fruit exports from SA of $2.3bn last year‚ just 8% went to the rest of Africa with Angola (15% of total)‚ Benin (12%) and Mozambique (11%) being the major recipients.

Only 6% of total SA coffee imports came from Ethiopia‚ which accounted for between 30% and 40% of Africa's total coffee exports.

"Much stands in the way of Africa realising the gains of deeper regional trade. Structural‚ logistical and historical impediments are towering. However, the opportunities are equally compelling as Africa's rising consumer markets provide increasing commercial depth.

"While the formation of a more viable manufacturing base on the continent will take time‚ the gains for intra-regional trade in agricultural goods are immediate‚ and necessary‚" Freemantle said.

Source: I-Net Bridge

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