Afreximbank to harmonise efforts to develop trade in Africa with WTO

Professor Benedict Oramah, president and chairman of Afreximbank, with Dr Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, director-general of the WTO. SUPPLIED.

Professor Benedict Oramah, president and chairman of Afreximbank, with Dr Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, director-general of the WTO. SUPPLIED.

Published Jul 1, 2024

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The African Export-Import Bank (Afreximbank) signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with the World Trade Organisation (WTO) to amplify the impact of their strategically aligned joint efforts of promoting global trade leveraging Africa’s unique resource endowment.

The MoU is expected to allow the two organisations to pursue a collaborative framework for harmonising and coordinating their efforts towards deepening key trade development activities on the continent.

Afreximbank and the WTO are part of an inter-agency partnership that is championing transformative change in the cotton industry in Africa’s Cotton-4 plus (C4+) countries, which include Benin, Burkina Faso, Chad and Mali, as well as Côte d’Ivoire as an observer.

The MoU will allow Afreximbank and the WTO secretariat the opportunity to expand and deepen their collaboration to support the cotton sector beyond the C4+ countries.

Their support will entail development of local and regional value chains of cotton in Africa, as well as their integration into the global value chain.

Another area of collaboration under the understanding will be on trade finance matters, addressing non-tariff barriers to trade, the digital economy, capacity building, the oceans’ economic and fisheries subsidies, the sports and creative economies and trading in the context of the African Continental Free Trade Agreement.

Afreximbank president and chairman, Professor Benedict Oramah, said the WTO secretariat was a natural partner to the bank, given their shared mandate of promoting trade and trade-related activities.

“We are already working with the secretariat on Fifa’s C4+ cotton initiative, for which we have committed financing for project preparation for cotton transformation projects in Africa. Formalising our relationship today signifies that we can go beyond our present collaboration to include other equally impactful interventions across key economic sectors in Africa,” Oramah said.

“The bank recently signed a charter with Confédération Africaine de Football (CAF) and the Rebranding Africa Forum (RAF) to build a robust sports’ economy, which will include commercialising and monetising African-made sports apparel and athleisure wear. This is yet another undertaking that will benefit from this MoU with the WTO secretariat.”

The C4+ countries have historically exported raw cotton for processing outside of the continent.

It is expected that developing local industries to process and transform cotton into textile could potentially create 500 000 jobs in the West African region.

If harnessed well, it is expected that within the next 10 years, the C4+ countries could process up to 25% of their cotton crops.

This undertaking requires circa $5 billion in investment in production facilities and training for workers, which in turn calls for capacity building, access to finance for businesses and improved infrastructure.

WTO secretariat director-general Dr Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala said the signing of the MoU was timely, as it reflected some of the key priorities of many of their members.

“I am particularly pleased to see that it will support members’ efforts in agriculture and food security, advance efforts to address harmful fisheries subsidies and promote cooperation on trade finance,” she said.

“I am especially pleased that Afreximbank has committed to explore the opening of a finance window that would assist the C-4 plus countries on their journey to scale value addition on the continent. I look forward to seeing real, on-the-ground results from this partnership.”

BUSINESS REPORT