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Africa:
Correcting Historical Injustices in the World Trade
Rulebook
Other News,
March 10, 2011
By
Pascal Lamy
Why did
Africa move from being a net exporter to a net
importer of food in the 1980s when the prices of its
key commodity exports tumbled and its agriculture
slowed down? Its food trade deficit is now around
USD 20 billion and, given the current rise in
prices, could get much worse.
While it
is vital to understand how the continent became a
net importer, it is also important to understand how
African agriculture can become more efficient and
competitive.
A country
can have a perfectly efficient and competitive
agricultural system yet still be an important
importer of food, or even a net importer. Europe,
for example, exports 9 percent of the world’s food
and imports 12 percent. The United States exports 10
percent and imports 8 percent. Being a food export
powerhouse does not preclude being a major importer
too.
African
agriculture needs to become more efficient, and in
that efficiency it needs to discover specialisation.
As a
fraction of the continent’s total merchandise
exports, African agricultural exports have also
fallen sharply over the years, from 42 to 6 percent
between 1960 and today. But this in and of itself is
not a bad sign. In fact, it simply mirrors what has
happened at the global level. In 1960, agriculture
comprised about 50 percent of world trade; today
that figure is about 6 percent. All this says is
that the world, including Africa, has industrialised.
One of the
principal findings in a recent publication by the
Consumer Unity & Trust Society (CUTS) is that
African agriculture has been shackled by: first,
colonial patterns of trade that have locked Africa
into commodity exports; and second, macroeconomic
and trade policies aimed at import substitution and
food self-sufficiency that have achieved the exact
opposite of their goal. In taxing agriculture and
shielding it from international competition, these
policies made African agriculture less competitive.
The
publication documents incredible infrastructural
bottlenecks in Africa, which for trade in
perishables is a very serious problem. It also
points out the limited regional food trade that
exists in Africa, sometimes because of a lack of
product complementarity though also because of a
simple lack of regional integration. Indeed I have
often heard it lamented that in Africa a
food-surplus and a food-deficit country located side
by side can be unable to trade with one another.
Another problem is shortages of agricultural inputs,
many of which are imported. In fact, I know from
first-hand experience that animal vaccines and
improved seeds are often considered a luxury in
Africa.
Another
astonishing statistic from CUTS is that “about 80
percent of trade in agricultural produce and food in
the East African region is informal and not
statistically recorded".
Stagnant
agriculture, combined with a population growth rate
higher than the world average, is obviously leading
to food insecurity in Africa. In fact, expenditures
on food there comprise a very high percentage of
total expenditures and a far higher percentage than
in the OECD. In Gabon, the figure is about 50
percent. Clearly, then, food security is also about
food affordability. Greater competition and
international trade helps bring down the price of
food.
African
agriculture has clearly passed through various
phases: state control and import substitution in the
1960s, when Africa’s food deficit started building;
then the structural adjustment era of the 1980s,
marked by the gradual privatisation of state-owned
farms; and then the dismantling of marketing boards
for key commodities. Nonetheless, Africa’s food
deficit has persisted. What preoccupies me the most,
however, is that its agricultural productivity
continues to languish.
The CUTS
study sets out a very important menu of
recommendations for our consideration: increasing
agricultural productivity, promoting regional trade,
“facilitating” trade through better infrastructure,
and educating and building the capacities of farmers
and traders. But this menu also includes the rapid
conclusion of the Doha Round of trade negotiations,
which is considered a priority.
Contrary
to what some have been saying about international
trade somehow being responsible for the plight of
African agriculture, this publication, as well as
several others, demonstrates that
import-substitution policies and a lack of
investment in agriculture have been the principal
culprits.
In my
view, here is how the Doha Round can make a modest
contribution to helping boost African agriculture.
It will give least-developed countries duty-free,
quota-free access to export markets. It will deal
with the colonial patterns of trade by reducing the
phenomenon of tariff escalation: for example, the
high tariffs imposed on processed coffee and
chocolate relative to coffee and cocoa powder. The
Round will also reduce the subsidies in the rich
world that have made it difficult for Africa to
compete in international markets and have flooded
its markets with cheap imports. The world needs
cheaper food, but food that is produced under
conditions of fair competition. In short, the Doha
Round will help level the playing field for Africa,
correcting historical injustices in the world trade
rule-book.
The news
item can also be viewed at:
http://www.other-news.info/
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