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The importance of Arab regional integration Perspectives for development Global CGE Analysis. Economic Development and Globalisation Division. The GAFTA. In 1981, the members of the Arab-League adopted an Agreement to Facilitate and Develop Inter-Arab Trade (AFDIAT).
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The importance of Arab regional integration • Perspectives for development • Global CGE Analysis Economic Development and Globalisation Division
The GAFTA • In 1981, the members of the Arab-League adopted an Agreement to Facilitate and Develop Inter-Arab Trade (AFDIAT). • The AFDIAT aimed at liberalization, perhaps even the establishment of a regional FTA, it was vague in its language and left open the selection of covered products to a set of malleable “principales”. • It could well have been seen as yet another part of the Arab League’s facade dissimination. Nevertheless, 16 years later was to become the basis for what might be seen as a the Arab trade integration scheme.
The GAFTA (Cont.) • On February 19, 1997, the Social and Economic Council of the Arab League adopted a declaration on a Pan-Arab FTA establishing an “executive program” for the AFDIAT, which is in fact the text of the GAFTA. • The GAFTA required that “all Arab goods traded among the party-states shall be liberalized in accordance with the gradual liberalization principle which shall be applied as of January 1, 1998”, allowing for “full liberalization” by July 21, 2007. • It established a principle of national treatment among states parties, and a general prohibition on non-tariff barriers”, GAFTA members include 17 of the 22 Arab League countries of which Yemen and Sudan, as LDCs, have a longer period of liberalization (until 2010) and the Palestinaian Authority has been exempted from tariff reductions. • In 2002, the Arab League’s Economic and Social Council resolved to accelerate the gradual liberalization process, abolishing tariffs by January 1, 2005
Compared to other regions… Fig1: Intraregional exports as % of total exports (2010) Source: ITC The Arab region is less integrated, even compared to African countries
Intra-Arab trade volume has on average grown by 24.1% between 2005 and 2009, but recent data shows a change in trend Value of intra Arab trade in Billion USD
Compared to Arab exports to the world, intra-Arab exports are more diversified and less concentrated on chemical products Structure of Arab exports
Why the impacts are too small? • The main GAFTA’s weakness is in the realm of non-tariff barriers, reflecting the general problem. • Moreover, trade in services and investment liberalization are not included in GAFTA and will require further efforts. • None well determined rules of origins • NTMs are not homogeneous across countries • Non convergence in terms of indirect fiscal instruments on imports. Other taxes have similar impacts as tariffs are not removed (consumption, excess...) • Licenses, negative lists and many other barriers still active • Very heterogeneous system of implicit and explicit subsidies on production that affect relative competitiveness harms the development of intra-trade.
Simulations results: Impacts on trade • A full implementation of the FTA increases intra-Arab trade increase by around 10 per cent. If 50 per cent transport cost is reduced intra-Arab trade could increase by 38.5%. • The application of common external tariff increases trade with non-Arab partners as the market access will increase in both directions. • The business as usual (BaU) scenario will lead to 8.5 per cent share of intra-Arab trade. If scenario 2 is implemented, the share of intra-regional trade will increase by 3 points
Simulations results: Impacts on unemployment • both skilled and unskilled unemployment rate can be reduced significantly, by around 4 basis points in the Arab region as a whole. • As expected, the impact is most important in the non-oil producing countries that will experience a reduction in both unskilled and skilled unemployment by around 5 basis points. • scenario 4 will contribute greatly reduce unemployment in most Arab countries. At the country level, Egypt, Tunisia and Morocco could register around a 5 basis points reduction of unskilled and skilled unemployment. This would reduce both their unskilled and skilled unemployment rate reduced by around 40 per cent.
Thank you! • For additional information, please contact: • UNITED NATIONS – ESCWAP.O. Box 11-8575, Riad el-Solh,Beirut – LebanonWeb: http://www.escwa.un.org/