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DRC moves to stem income losses in Comesa entry push
Participating in the free trade area means that the DRC will have to liberalise its market and allow goods from members of the trading bloc to flow freely. Photo/LIZ MUTHONI
Posted Tuesday, October 20 2009 at 00:00
Mineral-rich Democratic Republic of Congo plans to join a regional compensation fund by the end of the year to help it avoid revenue losses that threaten to deny it membership to Africa’s largest market bloc.
The vast nation, renowned for its huge reserves of gold, cobalt, diamond and copper, has since last year stepped up a campaign to be granted membership of the Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa (Comesa) as part of an ongoing reconstruction exercise after decades of civil strife.
The Comesa adjusting facility specifically helps member nations to cushion themselves against losses arising from market liberalisation programmes as more nations integrate into larger economic communities.
Burundi and Rwanda last month became the latest beneficiaries of the fund when they received 4.4 million and 10.3 million euros respectively to help them integrate into the membership of the East African Community (EAC).
The leadership of Comesa is however warning that the incorporation of the DRC into its existing free trade area (FTA) and Customs Union arrangement would result in revenue losses once its existing tariff structures are aligned with those of the market.
“The big concern remains the removal of 100 per cent of most favoured nation (MFN) rates in line with the Comesa FTA,” Comesa secretary-general Sindiso Ngwenya, said noting that DRC and the Comesa secretariat would have to conduct a joint study to inform policy strategies of tackling threats posed by the removal of the MFN rates with respect to Comesa.
“The study should also recommend how the DRC could be assisted to align its national tariffs to the Comesa CET (Common External Tariff) as well as protect infant industry,” Mr Ngwenya said, adding that “Comesa will fund the study and the work will be undertaken with speed.”
The technical definition of a free trade area is a designated group of countries that have agreed to eliminate tariffs, quotas and preferences on most goods and services.
Countries most often adopt this kind of economic integration if their economical structures are complementary.
However, should they be likely to compete against one another, they opt for a customs union.
Unlike a customs union, members of a free trade area have different quotas and customs policies with non-members.
To avoid evasion, most commonly through re-exportation, countries use a system of certification of origin, most commonly called rules of origin, with a specified minimum requirement for local material inputs and local transformations adding value to the goods.
Special treatment
Goods that don’t meet these minimum requirements are not entitled to the special treatment envisioned in the free trade area provisions.
However, in a morale boosting development, statistics showed that except for the MFN status, all of DRC’s tariff arrangements are in tandem with those of Comesa — meaning that identifying a solution to the MFN-tied revenue losses would improve its chances for admission to the 19-member market.
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