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AfCFTA

The African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) is a trade agreement that aims to create a vast free trade area for over 1.3 billion people with a combined GDP of over US$ 3.4 trillion.

The idea of creating an Africa-wide free trade area emerged at the 2012 African Union (AU) summit in Addis Ababa. Negotiations began in 2015 and the deal was signed by 44 of the 55 AU member states in March 2018, during the AU summit in Kigali. While the agreement has been operational since May 2019, some of its trade rules have only been implemented since October 2022 and between just seven states.

The AfCFTA aims to liberalize 97% of products, 90% of non-sensitive products followed by 7% of sensitive products. Phase 1 of the negotiation process has focused on trade in goods and services. Phase 2 includes competition policy, intellectual property and investment. Phase 3 incorporates e-commerce protocol. Key substantive issues are still to be completed, including some rules of origin, tariff concessions and specific services sector commitments.

The negotiating process has lacked transparency, with information available only through leaked texts. Social movements, including trade unions, have complained that they have tried in vain to engage with the AfCFTA secretariat.

While the proponents of the deal have claimed the AfCFTA will foster development in Africa and help African businesses, the deal has attracted criticism and opposition as well.

At first, large economies such as South Africa and Nigeria refused to endorse the agreement. Nigerian business groups, manufacturers, traders, farmers, small and medium enterprises expressed concerns that Africa could become a dumping ground of cheap products coming from abroad, which could wreak havoc on the ongoing industrialisation process. However, Nigeria joined at the 11th hour in July 2019, when the deal entered its operational phase, while South Africa had signed a year earlier. Eritrea is the only AU state that has refused to sign.

The AfCFTA is built on the dogma of free-market capitalism. It pushes a model of “development” hinged on increased trade and investment under the guise of pan-Africanism. However, it is “more of the same” trade rules that have been operational under the World Trade Organisation and bilateral agreements. It has been supported by major economic players such as the EU, the US, the African Development Bank, the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development, and the World Bank. Ultimately, it will likely benefit only African elites and transnational capital at the expense of local communities and small-scale traders who have historically traded informally in Africa, the majority of whom are women.

Some foreign powers have already seen opportunities arising from the AfCFTA. China is planning to capitalise on it to connect African and Chinese markets to promote the free movement of goods, persons, capital and technologies. India has signed a trade deal with Mauritius, which would provide a foothold into Africa. Turkish investors also see possibilities for development within the whole continent, while the EU might consider a mega trade deal. The US is speculated to sign a trade deal with the AfCFTA when the African Growth and Opportunity Act expires in 2025. The two parties have already signed a memorandum of understanding to promote trade and investment at the 2022 US-Africa Business Forum.

The full text of the AfCFTA is available here: https://www.bilaterals.org/?afcfta-consolidated-text-march

The following protocols are available here:
• Competition policy: https://www.bilaterals.org/?afcfta-protocol-on-competition
• Intellectual property rights: https://www.bilaterals.org/?afcfta-protocol-of-on-intellectual
• Investment: https://www.bilaterals.org/?afcfta-protocol-on-investment-48215
• Digital trade: https://www.bilaterals.org/?afcfta-digital-trade-protocol-49908
• Women and youth in trade: https://www.bilaterals.org/?afcfta-women-and-youth-in-trade

Last update: October 2023
photo: Paul Kagame/CC BY-NC-ND 2.0


African countries urged to remove non-tariff barriers to realize AfCFTA
The African Union Commission called for addressing non-tariff barriers in order to realize the major aspirations of the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) Agreement.
Africa trade pact negotiators to fast-track e-commerce talks
The digital trade, e-commerce talks that were to have been part of phase 3 will now take place alongside phase 2 negotiations
Nigeria set to ratify AfCFTA agreement – Minister
Nigeria is currently in the process of ensuring the ratification of the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) agreement, the minister of trade, Niyi Adebayo, said.
AfCFTA could boost Dubai-Africa trade by 10% over next 5 years
The AfCFTA will offer a huge opportunity for UAE investors who will be able to do business on a single set of trade and investment rules across the African continent.
World’s biggest free-trade pact targets first deal in 2021
The outstanding negotiations will be finalized through a new African virtual trade-diplomacy platform that is being developed as a public-private partnership between the African Union Commission and more than 20 African multinational companies.
Pessimism surges, but many insist African free trade will take off
Initially planned to take place on 1 July 2020, the implementation of the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) has been indefinitely postponed due to the Covid-19 pandemic.
ECOWAS holds Regional Meeting on AfCFTA for ECOWAS Institutions and Specialised Agencies
The Economic Community of West African States held a virtual meeting on the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) for ECOWAS Institutions and Specialised Agencies on the 21st of July 2020.The AfCFTA seeks to create a single continental market for goods and services, with free movement of business persons and investments, in order to engender the acceleration and establishment of a continental Customs Union.
Africa free trade area to create new opportunities for China-Africa cooperation: expert
The African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) will create new opportunities for China-Africa cooperation, an Ethiopian expert said on Tuesday.
Proposal to push AfCFTA implementation to January
The executive secretary of the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA), has proposed to African heads of state that trading under this framework starts in January 2021, according to an official.
Nigeria can’t survive AfCFTA with weak industrialisation – Gbajabiamila
For Nigeria to compete and survive in the African Continental Free Trade Area, it must as a matter of national emergency ramp up industrialisation and manufacturing activities, the Speaker, House of Representatives, Femi Gbajabiamila, has said.