Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byMary Preston Modified over 9 years ago
1
The interim EPAs – some facts TIPS Workshop, Pretoria 4-5 March Dr Mareike Meyn
2
The interim EPAs - some facts. TIPS workshop March 20082 Overview 1.Which countries are the EPA signatories? 2.What do the liberalisation schedules say? 3.What else had been agreed? (Export duties, standstill clauses, MFN, SPS/TBT…) 4.Trade defense 5.Infant industry protection 6.The rendez-vous clauses
3
The interim EPAs - some facts. TIPS workshop March 20083 1. The EPA signatories 35 of 77 ACP countries initialled an EPA Except CARIFORUM all EPA configurations lost members Most non-signatories benefit from EBA except six Pacific and three African non-LDCs Except CARIFORUM ‘interim EPAs’ with ‘sub-regions’ were initialled In Central Africa only Cameroon initialled In West Africa two countries initialled separate agreements In Southern and Eastern Africa the picture is most complex Negotiations continue in 2008. Objective: comprehensive, regional EPAs
4
3 2 1 1. SADC EPA 2. EAC 5 3. ESA EPA
5
The interim EPAs - some facts. TIPS workshop March 20085 Original EPA configurations and signatory states in southern and eastern Africa
6
The interim EPAs - some facts. TIPS workshop March 20086 2. What do the liberalisation schedules say? East African Community (EAC) Only region where all countries have identical schedule based on EAC CET 25 years (2 years moratorium) Regional exclusion basket of about 20% of EU import value 3 tranches; ‘real’ liberalisation only starts in 2015 Revenue impact will be faced in the middle of the implementation period (2015-23) and will be significant Not all countries have yet applied EAC CET Most products will be liberalised in this period Consumer/producer effects will be end loaded
7
The interim EPAs - some facts. TIPS workshop March 20087 2. What do the liberalisation schedules say? Eastern and Southern Africa (ESA) 5 of 15 Countries have established individual liberalisation schedules in relation to COMESA CET COMESA CET has not yet been implemented Liberalisation occurs in 15 years (5 years moratorium) 2008-2013: tariff reduction to meet COMESA three bands tariffs Countries never agreed a formal definition that allocated the items in the nomenclature according to the groups Chromium and thallium waste Mauritius and Comoros: raw material Seychelles: intermediate Madagascar and Zimbabwe : final
8
The interim EPAs - some facts. TIPS workshop March 20088 2. What do the liberalisation schedules say? Eastern and Southern Africa (ESA) Exclusion basket differs between 2.5 to about 20% of EU import value among the countries Revenue impact will be faced in the first tranche and will be very different among the countries Depends to what extent country’s tariff differs from COMESA CET Whether tariffs can be replaced by sales tax Consequences for regional integration? Review of EPA commitments in light of COMESA CET becomes impossible
9
The interim EPAs - some facts. TIPS workshop March 20089 2. What do the liberalisation schedules say? Southern African Development Community (SADC) 5 of 8 countries established 2 liberalisation schedules Liberalisation over 10 years, no moratorium Exclusion baskets Mozambique: large exclusion basket about 38% of EU import value (2004-2006) BLNS: nobody knows… Theory: TDCA exclusion basket plus small number of BLNS sensitive products should mirror BLNS EPA exclusion basket Practice: Impossible to compare TDCA (negative list) with EPA (positive list) BLNS are de facto implementing TDCA
10
The interim EPAs - some facts. TIPS workshop March 200810 Summary of liberalisation schedules SADCESAEAC Total time of liberalisation 10 years15 years25 years Liberalisation start 200820132010 Exclusion list (average value of EU imports 2004-06) x – 37.8%2.5 – 20.1%19.7% Regional approach Partly (BLNS)NoYes Review of tariff concessions for RI Yes No
11
The interim EPAs - some facts. TIPS workshop March 200811 3. What else had been agreed? Export duties no African EPA text foresees their abolition but only that duties shall not be increased/new duties introduced Exemption from this principle for SADC and EAC in ‘exceptional circumstances’ (such as infant industry protection or to maintain currency stability) EAC needs consent of the EU; SADC only needs to consult “Standstill clause” (freezing of applied tariffs level) Found in all EPA texts except CARIFORUM EAC and ESA: agreement not to increase applied customs duties comprises ‘all trade’ SADC: only for ‘all products subject to liberalisation’
12
The interim EPAs - some facts. TIPS workshop March 200812 3. What else had been agreed? MFN clause (need to extent preferences granted to ‘major trading economies’ to the EU) Can be found in all texts But: exemptions for CARIFORUM and PACP (Part I, Art. 16) 2. With respect to the subject matter covered by this Chapter, the Pacific States shall accord to the EC Party any more favourable treatment applicable as a result of the Pacific States becoming party to a free trade agreement with any major trading economy after the signature of this Agreement. 3. Where a Pacific State or the Pacific States can demonstrate that they have been offered by a third Party a substantially more favourable treatment in goods, including rules of origin, than that offered by the EC Party, the Parties will consult and may jointly decide how best to implement the provisions of paragraph 2. What does this mean in practice?
13
The interim EPAs - some facts. TIPS workshop March 200813 3. What else had been agreed? Special provision on administrative cooperation All texts: Refusal or undue delays of administrative cooperation can result in the temporary suspension of trade preferences. Non-tariff barriers and subsidies All texts: Prohibition of import or export restrictions other than customs duties and taxes (notwithstanding anti- dumping/counter-vailing measures and infant industry provisions). Some texts: agricultural export subsidies shall be abolished; all texts: national subsidies are allowed – value of provisions? Exemptions in case of infant industry protection in some texts
14
The interim EPAs - some facts. TIPS workshop March 200814 3. What else had been agreed? Customs and trade facilitation Central element in the EPAs SADC: partially regional approach: customs legislation and procedures shall be harmonised Chapter has not yet been drafted in EAC and ESA Sanitary and phytosanitary standards/technical barriers to trade Chapter outlines cooperation areas and technical support SADC: list of ‘priority products’ A) increasing understanding of and compliance with EU standards B) products where regional standards shall be harmonised Chapters have not yet been drafted in EAC and ESA
15
The interim EPAs - some facts. TIPS workshop March 200815 African ‘priority products’
16
The interim EPAs - some facts. TIPS workshop March 200816 4. Trade defence in the EPAs TDCA and Central and West Africa EPAs: pre-emptive safeguards if ‘availability or access to foodstuff is endangered’ No link in ESA, EAC, and SADC between safeguards and food security
17
The interim EPAs - some facts. TIPS workshop March 200817 Bilateral safeguard conditions in the ESA EPA (Art. 21) 2. Safeguard … may be taken where a product originating in one Party is being imported into the territory of the other Party insuch increased quantities and under such conditions as to cause or threaten to cause: (a) serious injury to the domestic industry … or; (b) disturbances in a sector of the economy,.., or (c) disturbances in the markets of agricultural like or directly competitive products … 3. Safeguard measures referred to in this Article shall not exceed what is necessary to remedy or prevent the serious injury or disturbances, as defined in paragraph 2 and 5(b). Those safeguard measures of the importing Party may only consist of one or more of the following: (a)suspension of the further reduction of the rate of import duty (b)increase in the customs duty on the product concerned up to a level which does not exceed the customs duty applied to other WTO Members, and (c)introduction of tariff quotas on the product concerned.
18
The interim EPAs - some facts. TIPS workshop March 200818 5. Infant industry protection Provisions to apply safeguard measures in order to protect infant industries are more generous than in TDCA However: only applicable for 10-15 years; thereafter only safeguards Is this a problem???
19
The interim EPAs - some facts. TIPS workshop March 200819 6. The rendez-vous clause
20
The interim EPAs - some facts. TIPS workshop March 200820 6. The rendez-vous clause What are the binding commitments in the IEPA? Parties committed to continue negotiations on the topics outlined in the rendez-vous clause and any other topic they would like to include But: African countries did not commit to agree on any of the provisions that are subject to continued negotiations The rendez-vous clauses for SADC, EAC and ESA do not mention Intellectual property rights protection Social issues (such as commitment to respect international labour standards Provisions for personal data protection
21
The interim EPAs - some facts. TIPS workshop March 200821 Main messages Only CARIFORUM has yet completed the EPA negotiations Except CARIFORUM and EAC only ‘sub-regional’ or country EPAs exist The implications for economic regional integration: Offering chances for EAC Destroy de facto SADC and COMESA Some clauses (MFN, standstill) are inferior than in CARIFORUM and/or PAC ‘Any other area the parties feel being relevant’ can be subject to ongoing negotiations What remains disputed: To what extent can single provisions be renegotiated? Can a region ‘import’ any superior provision reached within another region?
22
The interim EPAs – some facts TIPS Workshop 5-6 March 2008
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com Inc.
All rights reserved.