Accompany
market-opening with industrialization and capacity
building, Afreximbank Rep urges
Kanayo Awani, Managing Director, Intra-African Trade Initiative, Afreximbank, addressing the Trade with Africa Summit in Chicago, U.S.
Efforts
to achieve market opening should be accompanied with
industrialization and capacity building initiatives to help African
countries produce value-added goods, Kanayo Awani, Managing Director
of the Intra-African Trade Initiative at the African Export-Import
(bank (Afreximbank), has said.
In
a keynote address during the opening of the Trade with Africa (TWA)
Business Summit in Chicago, United States, on Thursday, Ms. Awani
said that such an approach would allow for such value-added goods to
be traded within the continent and globally in a competitive manner.
She
highlighted the need for the approach to be underpinned by enhanced
collaboration, including with governments regional development banks,
the private sector and relevant stakeholders on the continent and in
the Diaspora.
Afreximbank
was already financing and facilitating the production of such
value-added goods, using a number of instruments which also support
intra-African trade, said Ms. Awani. Those included supporting the
establishment of industrial parks and export processing zones,
establishing testing inspection and certification services, also
known as Africa quality assurance centres, and setting up export
trading companies.
The
Bank had also recently launched the Pan-African Payments and
Settlements System, established MANSA, an Africa customer due
diligence repository platform, and instituted the Intra-African Trade
Fair, which hold its second edition in Kigali from 1 to 7 September
2020, in order to further boost intra-African trade and support the
implementation of the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA),
continued the Managing Director.
She
reaffirmed Afreximbank’s commitment to transforming trade on the
African continent and to working with partners, including the U.S.,
to promote inclusive growth and socio-economic transformation.
Although
the political relationship between African policy makers and
Washington had strengthened in the last two decades, resulting in
increased in foreign aid to Africa, she noted, the conversation had
shifted from capturing foreign aid to trade. The accompanying
strategy, therefore, needed to shift to take into account that Africa
now had many of the fastest growing economies in the world and was
home to a rapidly growing consumer class.
Ms.
Awani added that, with the Diaspora accounting for 32 million
Africans, there were opportunities for growth in Diaspora-focused
trade in ethnic foods, textiles, the creative industry, including
music and film, and in tourism.
Also
speaking, Albert Muchanga, African Union Commissioner for Trade and
Industry, said that the AfCFTA had the potential to
overhaul, ease and increase trade across borders in Africa.
Toyin
Umesiri, founder of the TWA Summit, urged African and U.S. policy
makers to remove barriers to trade in order to foster economic growth
in both regions and to allow for the exploitation of the untapped
market for authentic African products, raw and manufactured items in
the U.S.
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