Nigeria's President Buhari says will soon sign up to African free-trade agreement
Nigeria’s President Muhammadu Buhari said on
Wednesday the country will ‘sign up soon’ to a $3 trillion African
free-trade agreement.
Nigeria is one of Africa’s two largest economies, the other
being South Africa. Buhari’s government had refused to join a
continental free-trade zone established in March, on the grounds that it
wishes to defend its own businesses and industry.
The administration later said it wanted more time to consult business leaders.
“In trying to guarantee employment, goods and services in our
country, we have to be careful with agreements that will compete, maybe
successfully, against our upcoming industries,” Buhari told a news
conference during a visit by South African President Cyril Ramaphosa.
“I am a slow reader, maybe because I was an ex-soldier. I didn’t
read it fast enough before my officials saw that it was all right for
signature. I kept it on my table. I will soon sign it.”
Ramaphosa condemns xenophobic attacks on Nigerians
Earlier Ramaphosa told a business conference in Abuja that South
Africa saw huge benefits from the continental free trade deal and that a
draft agreement relating to the movement of people was being reviewed.
In his first visit to Nigeria since becoming South Africa’s
president in February, Ramaphosa said he was seeking greater
collaboration between the two countries.
He condemned xenophobic attacks on foreigners in South Africa,
including Nigerians, against a backdrop of economic hardship and soaring
unemployment.
“This is a working visit to come to Nigeria and I’ve made it a
specific issue that I want relations with Nigeria to improve
exponentially,” Ramaphosa told the conference.
Africa’s big economies
Nigeria and South Africa have the two largest economies in Africa.
Along with Angola, they make up about three-fifths of sub-Saharan
Africa’s annual economic output.
Both countries have been hit hard in recent years by low commodity
prices that slowed growth, cut government revenues and weakened their
currencies. But each has emerged from recession, largely because of a
rebound in commodity prices.
The growth of the two economies played a large part in the World
Bank’s forecast that sub-Saharan Africa’s economy will grow by 3.1
percent this year, up from 2.6 percent in 2017.
African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA)
The continental free-trade zone, which encompasses 1.2 billion
people, was initially joined by 44 countries in March. South Africa
signed up earlier this month. Six countries, including Nigeria, are yet
to sign the agreement.
Economists point to the continent’s low level of intra-regional
trade as one of the reasons for Africa’s enduring poverty and lack of a
strong manufacturing base.
African Union officials said countries that have signed the
agreement will need to submit a schedule of tariffs by December, adding
that they expect intra-African trade to double over the next four years
once tariffs are reduced.
Source: Reuters
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