Ngwenya addresses the summit yesterday. / Timothy Kisambira. The words ‘Tripartite Free Trade Area’ (TFTA) were among the most commonly used phrases at the Global African Investment Summit, which closed yesterday, at the Kigali Convention Centre. The tripartite region, launched last year in Egypt, aims at economically integrating Africa’s three major regional economic blocs – the Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa (COMESA), the Southern African Development Community (SADC), and the East African Community (EAC). The three economic blocs would create the largest trading bloc in Africa, comprising 26 countries, with about 620 million consumers and a combined GDP of almost $1.2 trillion. So far, 17 countries have ratified membership to the region with the remaining nine expected to follow suit. Experts say that realisation of the free trade area hold great potential on Africa’s development as it will promote intra-Africa trade and develop the African market. The TFTA is expected to contribute to Africa’s development, experts citing the opportunity to open up a reliable market that spans across the continent to allow free movement of labour and services. Rather than rely on negotiations with the West, promoters of the free trade area say that countries will be able to reduce the cost of doing business among them. In an interview with The New Times at the sidelines of the summit, Sidiso Ngwenya, the secretary-general of COMESA, said the new bloc will have trade values worth more than $50 billion. This, he said, will be a welcome boost in...
Why Africa should be keen on the Tripartite Free Trade Area
Posted on: September 8, 2016
Posted on: September 8, 2016