Corporate News
Kenya asked to work closely with trade negotiators
A Nakumatt shopping mall. Development experts are urging Kenya to use experts when signing deals. Photo/FILE
Posted Thursday, November 5 2009 at 00:00
Development experts in Kenya are proposing ways to benefit from China’s growing interest in Africa even as latest trade figures show widening trade gap in favour of the Asian nation.
China is primed to experience the fastest economic growth in the post-recession world with the International Monetary Fund’s latest figures predicting her 2010 rate at nine per cent.
Legal experts
This week, a team of government and business leaders joins delegates from other African countries at a Chinese investment forum in Egypt to bargain for the continent’s fair share in the gravy train.
While the Chinese engagement with the continent has led to the revival of some collapsing industries and rekindled the west’s interest in the region, experts want the regional leaders to tread carefully in the new-found partnership.
“The government must equip itself with topnotch trade negotiators and legal experts to ensure that all agreements with China are crafted in such a way that maximises the underlying opportunities while mitigating against the incidental risks,” Prof Dorothy McCormick, a lecturer at the University of Nairobi’s Institute of Development Studies (IDS) said.
Of late, China has caught the world’s imagination with its no-strings-attached foreign aid advanced to Africa with latest figures also indicating that direct investment inflows to the continent defied the ravaging global recession, rising between 78 to 81 per cent during the difficult period.
A study — China-Africa Economic Relations — released in Nairobi this week by IDS indicates that 80 per cent of the Chinese aid was extended to the oil and mineral rich nations of Angola, Nigeria and Zimbabwe.
Similarly, fuel and minerals constitute 85 per cent of Africa’s exports to China.
Trade in manufactured goods is skewed in favour of China, whose imports from the region are between 10 and 20 per cent every year.
The 2005 expiry of the Multi Fibre Agreement – an instrument that initially prevented Chinese textile from accessing the American market under concessionary terms offered in the instruments like Agoa — has been singled out as a major reason behind the slow death of the continent’s textile industry.
“Africa gets hurt in her relations with China as governments do not have coherent investment policies to protect themselves from such easy engagement,” said Prof McCormick
Kenya, which mainly exports scrap metal, tea, textile fabrics, vegetables to China imports telecoms equipment, motor vehicles, electronic apparatus and cotton from the Asian nation.
“The problem with most of the Chinese imports is that most of the products are similar but cheaper than what is produced locally, leading to cases such as the 2000-2005 period when Kenya’s textile exports to Uganda and Tanzania dropped by 55 per cent,” said Dr Joseph Onjala of IDS, who co-ordinated the study on the impact of the country’s bilateral relations with China.
A Ministry of Trade official, who takes part in trade negotiations but cannot be named because he is not the government’s spokesperson, said most of the restrictive clauses in the Chinese agreements usually pass unnoticed because technical experts at foreign affairs and trade ministries do not get the chance to review them before acceptance.
Government officials
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Be ware of China! Did you know that almost 100% of the news from China is censored by the government and is part news part propagada? That for example the effects of the melamine-in-milk scandal and the fatalities from the recent earthquakes were all grossly understated. That the structural failures (colapsed building, bridges and flyovers) from those earthquakes were more due to use of sub-standard materials than from anything else?
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