Title: Endangering Cotonou! EPAs: Towards Development or Disempowerment?
1Endangering Cotonou!EPAs Towards Development or
Disempowerment?
- Muyatwa Sitali
- JCTR/Jubilee-Zambia
- ESA EPA Information Seminar
- 31 May 2007, Lusaka ZAMBIA
2Whos Afraid of EPAs
- That EPAs are a threat to progress of
development including the attainment of MDGs is
a widely expressed concern by many organisations,
associations, groups and societies. - ... we come to the conclusion that they (EPAs)
are not in line with our principles. On the
contrary, they are a threat to the well-being of
our people and our economic development. While
we appreciate the development objectives of the
Cotonou Partnership Agreement, we are mindful
that in the current negotiations the European
Union and our governments have lost sight of
these objectives. 24 Church organisations
meeting in Tanzania, April 2007
3EPA process and Concerns
- Concerned that at this advanced stage of the
negotiations, Africas priorities have not been
positively and adequately addressed by the
European Commission Ministers responsible of
Trade of the African UnionJanuary 2007. - There is still no confidence yet in the ability
of EPAs to be pro-development. UNECA, December
2006 - A major concern is the impact that the trade
liberalisation to be wrought by EPAs would have
on fiscal revenue The prospect of falling
government revenueimposes a heavy burden on your
countries (ACPs) and threatens to further hinder
your ability to achieve the Millennium
Development Goals. Former UN Secretary General,
Kofi Annan
4EPA process and concerns
- We are not ready to embark on full market
reciprocity arrangements Hon. Dora Siliya, Dep.
Minister of MCTI, Zambia, April, 2007. -
- I am more convinced that the EPAs stand to knock
us back. EPAs stand to harm us. They will only
benefit our European partners. The ACP must sit
up and look at this issue critically. Kwame
Osei-Prempeh, Ghanaian MP at a Joint EU ACP
Parliamentary Assembly in Brussels 2005
5Why the concerns?
- EUs limited view on development
- Uncertainties about how much should be
liberalised EUs proposals to liberalise 80 per
cent of all trade. - Divergences on Benchmarks and the Review clause
- Differences on Differential Treatment and
commitments - Misunderstanding Art. XXIV on substantially all
trade - Ambiguities regarding WTO Compatibility ---
Reasonable length of time - Pressure to meet 2007 deadline rather than
development - Double standards on financial cooperation and
assistance
61. EUs limited view on development
- The EC favours an approach that would
indiscriminately open ESA markets inline with the
EUs Lisbon Strategy of 2000 which aims at making
Europe "the most competitive and dynamic
knowledge-driven economy by 2010 by - Reduced Non-tariff barriers to the EU exports and
investments - We need to look at the whole operating
environment in third countries says the
Commission, and make sure regulation is
transparent, non discriminating and the least
restrictive possible. - Better access to raw material inputs in order to
compete on a fair basis the main goal here is
to completely eliminate export taxes and other
export restrictions which trading partners use to
secure their own raw materials supply. - The opening up of public procurement markets!
This is an enormous untapped potential for EU
exporters says the Commission however practices
in partner countries impede the fair
participation of EU suppliers and shut them
out from important exporting opportunities. - Improvement of the application of trade defence
(anti-dumping) mechanism by third countries,
which often cancels out the obtained market
access for EU in ACPs.
72. Uncertainties about how much should be
liberalised EUs proposals to liberalise 80 per
cent of all trade is contrary to EUs development
history
83. Different views on Benchmarks and the Review
clause
- ESA group proposed to link regional integration
and development before liberalisation - EC response to this proposal is dismissive and
fails to recognise the need of ACP regions to
develop before opening up As it is formulated,
this review clause is not acceptable. While we
are not against well defined review clauses, we
(EC) think that they should be limited in their
scope and mainly aimed at accelerating or
extending liberalisation. As it is, it may void
the agreement of its sense. The EC forgets that
the sense of the agreement is to deliver for
development, not market opening for the sake of
it. - EC suggestion is review be based on timeframes
94. Differences on Differential Treatment and
commitments
- ESA region proposed to exempt LDCs from market
opening commitments as part of a full draft text
in August 2006. - ECs response showed a characteristic
intransigence. - The LDC opt-out is not acceptable ... Exemption
from commitments for LDCs would impair the
achievement of the regional integration and
development objectives of the agreement. - ECs acknowledges its negotiating mandate that
LDCs have the choice to continue the EBA
arrangement which is typical of a differentiation
between LDCs and non LDCs. - On the contrary, the EC has accepted a similar
proposal from the Pacific ACP which is not based
on free a trade agreement, and would allow each
pacific ACP country to either opt in or opt out.
(Oxfam, January 2007)
105. Misunderstanding Art. XXIV on substantially
all trade
- Under WTO, there is no common understanding of
what substantially all trade means, it is subject
to interpretation by means. - Consistent urge to negotiate issues beyond the
challenge at WTO, e.g services, investments,
procurement and competition policy - In WTO negotiations LDCs have been exempt from
having to commit to new services liberalization.
Furthermore, the Cotonou agreement does not
require services liberalization, and suggests it
should only happen after they have acquired
experience in applying the Most Favoured Nation
(MFN) treatment under GATS. - Outcomes could result in obligations that go
beyond those agreed in the WTO (WTO-plus), and
introduce into the bilateral context, issues that
contributed to the failures of Cancun
(investment, competition and government
procurement) and of Seattle (labour and
environment).
116. Ambiguities regarding WTO Compatibility ---
Reasonable length of time
- The EC has interpreted the reasonable length of
time to be 10 years, stating that it may be
longer in exceptional cases. However, longer
implementation periods are the norm not the
exception. For example, even an FTA between
developed countries partners such as Australia
and the US, Includes up to 18-years
implementation periods. - ESA countries need time to develop their domestic
economies before opening up. ESA draft, for
example, proposes longer implementation periods
than the EU has proposed up to twenty-five years
for finished goods, with a ten year
implementation moratorium (Art. 14), as well as
an unknown number of sensitive products to be
exempt from liberalization commitments (Art. 15).
127. Alternatives, EC putting non-LDCs in a dilemma
- EC would only begin to consider alternatives if a
particular country stops to negotiate. The EC
have said they are not looking at Alternatives
because all ACPs have continued to negotiate.
This overthrows calls by the AU countries to have
alternatives. - A country can only make that choice when they
know what other options are available. It makes
sense to have options first then countries can
make a choice. - If the EC withdraws Cotonou preferences on 1st
January 2008, the Community would breach the
Cotonou agreement, which prescribes a new
framework for trade which is equivalent to their
existing situation and conformity with WTO
rules. The European Commission appears to lack
the political will to comply with that commitment
in the Cotonou Agreement.
138. 2007 deadline and waiver
- There is no agreement yet on a number of items on
the EPA check list either on the trade or
development dimension - ESA negotiators have already quoted many reasons
including capacities and supply side constraints
that necessitate the extension of the negotiation
and the waiver defacto. - Almost a year past following the expiry of the
Lome waiver in January 2000 before it was
renewed, and no WTO members complained. - EPA negotiations were to be finalized three years
after the end of the DOHA negotiations to build
on the expected more pro-development multilateral
trade rules, including further clarity of
flexibilities under WTO/GATT Article XXIV.
However, in the DOHA negotiations, deadlines have
been missed by the day. - Without a clear conclusion from the DOHA Round,
there is no urgency for finalizing EPA
negotiations.
149.Double standards on financial cooperation and
assistance
- The EC is interested to fund only those issues
which they prefer rather than those outlined by
ESA. - For example, the EC is ready to finance capacity
building for trade-related issues, like trade
facilitation competition, investment, and
transparency in public procurement but not for
preparatory studies to undertake negotiations on
trade in services. - When west African negotiators asked for an
extension in the negotiations, ECs response was
that failure to sign EPAs on time would lead to
higher tariffs on more than 1 bio Euro or 9.5 per
cent of West Africa trade to EU
15Conclusion
- The areas of divergence are many
- Outcries from different countries asking their
governments not to sign EPAs because of
unclarified issues indicate peoples perceptions
of EPAs - Time for deep introspection is now
- Poor countries chance to move up the ladder of
development and meet the MDGs is now but poor
countries are kicking away the ladder - Partnership, not patronage is the imperative of
this era, age and generation. - Until the EC and our governments demonstrate to
us how CPAs commitment to poverty reduction will
be operationalised through an EPA, CSOs must
continue to oppose EPAs.
16END
- Thank you for listening in