• Narrow screen resolution
  • Wide screen resolution
  • Auto width resolution
  • Decrease font size
  • Default font size
  • Increase font size
South Bulletin: Individual Articles
Kigali Declaration on the Economic Partnership Agreement Negotiations

The following is the Declaration on EPAs adopted after a lively discussion at the African Union’s Conference of Trade Ministers held in Kigali, Rwanda on 29 October-2 November 2010.

We, Ministers of Trade of the Member States of the African Union, meeting on 1-2 November 2010 at the Sixth Ordinary Session of the AU Conference of Ministers of Trade, in Kigali, Republic of Rwanda

Having undertaken a critical review and assessment of the current state of the Economic Partnership Agreement (EPA) negotiations between the various African negotiating groups and the European Commission;

Reaffirming the Decisions and Declarations adopted on the EPA negotiations by the previous Sessions of our Conference and the AU Assembly of Heads of State and Government;

Also reaffirming the principle that no country should be worse off when concluding the EPA negotiations;

Also Recalling the set objectives for EPAs in the Cotonou Partnership Agreement (CPA) which, among others, are the achievement of sustainable development and eradication of poverty, reinforcement of ACP countries’ regional integration initiatives, and the gradual integration of the countries into the global economy;

Welcoming the Report of the AUC-RECs Coordination Meeting on the EPA negotiations, held in Lusaka, Zambia on 7-8 October 2010 as well as the Position Paper on EPAs that was prepared by the Coordination Meeting;

Taking into account the significant amount of resources (time, financial and human) that has been expended by African countries on the EPA negotiations;

Taking note of the conclusions of the Joint ACP-EU Ministerial Trade Committee Meeting in Brussels on 22 October 2010, particularly the need to speed up the negotiations processes with a view to concluding a development friendly Agreement as quickly as possible;

Bearing in mind that the Third Africa-EU Summit scheduled for 29 to 30 November 2010 in Tripoli, Libya, provides a good opportunity for Africa and Europe to engage in political dialogue at the highest level, and together find solutions to common concerns on the EPAs;

Hereby:

1. Express our concern at the current loss of dynamism in the EPA negotiations that has been due to the lack of progress in resolving the differences between the parties on a number of contentious issues;

2. Reaffirm that the construction of the trade regime in the EPAs must respect the objectives set for it in the CPA.

3. Reiterate our commitment to concluding development-friendly EPAs that will contribute meaningfully to reducing and ultimately eradicating poverty in our countries. In this regard, we urge the EU to dedicate additional, predictable and sustainable resources to specifically address EPA-related adjustment costs and build productive capacities;

4. Take note of the undertaking by the EC at the last Meeting of the Joint Ministerial Trade Committee on 20 to 21 October 2010 in Brussels, to display flexibility in the EPA negotiations and look forward to concrete proposals from EC negotiators in this regard; 

5. Also Reaffirm our conviction that EPAs can serve as instruments for growth and the promotion of development of African countries if the contentious issues in the negotiations are satisfactorily addressed;

6. Further Reaffirm our commitment to the proposals by the ACP Group that the objective criteria which form part of the political objectives agreed by the international community, at the multilateral level, are retained to determine the parameters that have to be met to enable the conclusion of the EPAs.

7. Call on the EU Party to clearly show greater appreciation for this central issue and concern of Africa and therefore to display more sense of understanding and flexibility in the EPA negotiations so that EPAs can achieve the development objectives, including the maintenance of adequate policy space, the need to sustain and deepen regional integration and the non-acceptance of WTO-plus commitments.

8. Urge the EU to extend and maintain Regulation 1528 to all countries that are negotiating EPAs until the completion of the full EPA negotiations and its implementation to ensure that there is no disruption of trade;

9. Express our deep concern about the pressure exerted by the European Commission on some countries and Regions to sign the interim EPAs, thus prejudicing the progress made in the negotiation process;

10. Commend the AUC-RECs Coordination Meeting on the development of the Position Paper on EPAs and agree to take into account the Position Paper’s Recommendations and Options for Africa on the EPAs, as a basis for the political engagement with the EU Party at the highest political level;

11. Call upon the Chairperson of the AU Commission, in collaboration with the ACP Secretariat, to engage politically at highest level with the EC prior to the Africa-Europe Summit; and

12. Also call upon our Heads of State and Government to bring their individual and collective influence to bear towards resolving the impasse on the EPA negotiations.

Done in Kigali, 2nd November 2010

 
Resolution on EPAs by ACP Ministers

The following is the Resolution on Economic Partnership Agreements adopted by the ACP Council of Ministers during their meeting in Brussels on 8-10 November 2010.

The ACP Council of Ministers,

- meeting in Brussels, Belgium, from 8 to 10 November 2010,

A. HAVING REGARD to the objectives of the Cotonou Agreement which include, inter alia, fostering the smooth and gradual integration of ACP States into the world economy;

B. HAVING REGARD to the special historical relationship with the European Union which offered ACP States preferential access into the EU market, albeit with WTO waivers and which necessitated rendering the ACP-EU trade regime WTO compatible;

C. WHEREAS in 2000 under the ‘Cotonou Agreement’ the ACP and EU agreed that EPAs would be negotiated and concluded by the end of 2007; and WHEREAS the EPAs were designed to preserve ACP preferences while requiring ACP States to gradually and asymmetrically open their markets in accordance with their political choices and levels of development;

D. WHEREAS the ACP States welcomed the EPAs in anticipation of a strong trade and development package that would build the competitiveness of their industries and diversify their economies; and WHEREAS the European Union has continued to stress that the development dimension of the EPAs lies in the outcome of the extensive economic and trade liberalization and reforms;

E. WHEREAS the EU continues to demand that liberalization of ACP markets should not be confined to trade in goods only – which would suffice to satisfy WTO requirements – but that ‘full’ EPAs should also include the liberalization of services, investment and government procurement, the introduction of competition rules and the reinforcement of intellectual property rights protection, including geographical indications, provisions on sustainable development and cooperation in tax matters;

F. WHEREAS the demand by the EU that EPAs should entail the elimination of tariffs on at least 80% of trade, in 15 years leaves ACP States with very little scope to support existing or future manufacturing industries, and WHEREAS by exposing their agriculture output to competition with subsidized imports, ACP States are left with almost no flexibility to support the value-addition that is such a fundamental requirement for moving up the development ladder;

G. WHEREAS the ‘Standstill’ clauses - that freeze tariffs at current levels - and inadequate ‘safeguards’ could in addition, make it difficult for ACP States to defend their agricultural sectors from subsidized EU imports, which could in turn undermine food security and livelihoods, particularly given that the EU recently re-introduced export subsidies in agriculture;

H. WHEREAS the elimination of tariffs would place a serious gap in many ACP States’ budgets, which rely upon import duties and trade taxes for up to 40% and beyond, of their government revenue. This is particularly worrisome in a context where the economic downturn is already placing great strain on ACP governments’ budgets;

I. WHEREAS EPAs were intended to be regional agreements, which would support the integration of small and fragmented ACP markets into stronger regional economies, and WHEREAS studies predict that granting free market access for the EU would undermine the scope for the ACP to first build up their own regional production chains. WHEREAS, in the rush to conclude agreements at the end of 2007, a number of countries were obliged to sign individual agreements – creating different trade regimes with the EU to those of their neighbours and thus undermining regional integration;

J. WHEREAS ACP States would need significant additional resources to cover the adjustment costs from EPAs, such as declining revenues and job losses, and to build their production systems and competitiveness in order to benefit from access to EU markets;

K. CONCERNED that in addition to extensive liberalization of trade in goods, the EU demands that ACP States should make commitments that aim to enable European investors to operate more easily in ACP markets. FURTHER CONCERNED that rules on intellectual property could undermine access to medicines and technology in ACP States. In addition, services liberalization and inclusion of competition, government procurement and taxation provisions could restrict the ACP governments’ scope and policy space to regulate investors in the public interest or to give domestic small and medium enterprises a boost – just as European governments are supporting their SMEs in times of global economic downturn;

L. WHEREAS the ACP States have been negotiating EPAs in seven different regional configurations with the EU for the past 8 years and yet so far, only 36 out of 77 ACP States have either initialled or signed an interim or full Agreement with the European Union (EU);

M. WHEREAS save for the CARIFORUM region that has already signed a full EPA, negotiations to conclude a comprehensive agreement, which also include those who have not yet agreed to the interim EPA so far, are continuing;

N. FURTHER CONCERNED that the EC negotiators have continued to exert severe pressure to ACP States to sign up to agreements that do not fully reflect their concerns and interests; and WHEREAS the negotiating process has not taken account of requisite asymmetries based levels of development;

O. WHEREAS there remain some key issues of serious concern to most ACP States and regions. These “contentious” issues include, inter alia, the definition of substantially all trade and the time frame for liberalisation; export taxes and quantitative restrictions; inclusion of a Most Favoured Nation (MFN) clause; non-execution clause; standstill clause; safeguard measures, including agriculture and treatment of infant industry; phasing out of the community levies; elimination of export subsidies; and inclusion of the development dimension for financing EPA implementation;

P. CONCERNED that while the EU has engaged with the African and Pacific countries and regions on some of these issues, it has not yet shown the requisite flexibility in its response;

Q. HAVING REGARD to the outcome of the ACP and Joint ACP-EU Ministerial Trade Committee meetings held in Brussels from 20 – 22 October 2010 and the extensive deliberations on EPAs negotiations and implementation.

RESOLVE TO

1. STRESS that the conclusion and smooth implementation of comprehensive and balanced EPAs that would help to speed up the sustainable development of the ACP States and the strengthening of regional integration must remain a joint and shared aim of the ACP and the EU. In this context, the ACP Group reiterates its total commitment to ensuring that the negotiations are concluded as quickly as possible.

2. RE-AFFIRM the need for objective criteria, based on the policy objectives agreed to by the international community, at the multilateral level be used to determine the parameters that would enable the conclusion and implementation of the EPAs. Agree that indicative criteria may be linked to the following areas: Millennium Development Goals (MDGs); industrial production, particularly the manufacturing sector; agricultural production; degree of transformation of exports; intra-regional trade; intra-ACP trade; ACP-EU trade; the price of agricultural and mining commodities; currency exchange rates; level of official development aid; and level of foreign direct investment.

3. URGE the EU to maintain Market Access Regulation (MAR) 1528 until the full EPAs have been signed and implemented with a view to provide stable, predictable and increased market access for ACP exports covered by the EPAs. Furthermore, the MAR 1528 should be extended to non-LDC ACP States which are in the negotiating process, whether or not they have initialed an interim or full EPA.

4. REITERATE to the EU the need for increased resources with jointly agreed binding modalities for mobilization, jointly defined financing mechanisms and structures; joint assessment of the implementation of programmes in the development matrix and the inclusion of development criteria by which to assess the effective contribution of the EPAs to the development of the ACP States.

5. STRESS that EPAs must build on pre-established integration schedules. FURTHER STRESS that the EPA process must take account of the specificities of the weakest states in the regions and thereby act as a unifying factor within the respective negotiating regions.

6. STRONGLY URGE the EU to exercise the required flexibility in respect of least developed and vulnerable countries as is politically appropriate bearing in mind the range of existing flexibilities in the Regional Trading Arrangements (RTAs) already notified to the WTO. The definition of the liberalization level and timeframe must therefore be based on regional needs and be jointly defended at the WTO.

7. REQUEST the EU to consider granting GSP EBA Facility to ACP regions whose majority membership comprises LDCs, and which so request, with a view to foster regional integration and in light of the fact that such an offer is politically defensible even in the WTO;

8. REITERATE that the EU should demonstrate maximum flexibility on all the outstanding contentious issues, with a view to resolving them and thus afford the ACP States and regions the opportunity to encourage industrialization, infant industry development, value addition, enhance revenue collection, pursue bilateral agreements with third parties, particularly in the context of south-south trade, and allow for maximum use of policy space for development purposes.

9. REQUEST the EU to include a specific safeguard clause for agriculture in the framework of the EPAs while maintaining the possibility of resorting to the Special Safeguard Mechanism during WTO negotiations, in view of the fact that agriculture is the mainstay in many ACP States and regions, and hence there must sufficient flexible and automatic means to protect the livelihoods of the many small farmers and to ensure food security.

10. RE-AFFIRM that until an alternative source of funding is secured for supporting regional integration, retention of community levies by the concerned regions remains a non-negotiable issue.

11. NOTE that ACP States and regions are not bound to include provisions on relations with Turkey in the EPA, due to the fact that Turkey is not a direct stakeholder in the EPAs.

12. TAKE NOTE of the efforts by the Caribbean region to implement the comprehensive CARIFORUM-EC EPA, by inter alia, finalising the establishment of EPA institutions and holding the inaugural meeting of the CARIFORUM-EU Council. URGE the EU to facilitate the speedy implementation of the EPA related projects that have been formulated by the CARIFORUM States and region.

13. REQUEST the EU Member States to explore the possibility of reviewing the June 2002 negotiating mandate given to the European Commission to negotiate EPAs, with a view to defining the issue of flexibility and integrating binding development cooperation provisions, including the provision, on predictable and sustainable basis, of adequate additional resources necessary for the conclusion of development-friendly EPAs that also support regional integration.

14. INVITE the Africa-EU Summit to address the impasse in the EPA process with a view to seeking a mutually acceptable solution for the parties concerned.

15. REQUEST the President of Council to forward this resolution to the African Union Commission, ACP regional organizations, the Council of the European Union, the European Parliament and the European Commission, for appropriate consideration.

 

Brussels, 10 November 2010

 

 
 
 
 

 

 
South Centre Chairman Writes to African Leaders Expressing Serious Concerns on EPAs

The Chairperson of the South Centre, Mr. Benjamin Mkapa, former President of Tanzania, has written a letter to the political leaders of African countries, urging them to pay attention to the Economic Partnership Agreements as a priority issue and as a matter of great importance to Africa.

In his letter to the Heads of States and governments, Mr. Mkapa says the EPAs in their current form as proposed by the EU will have serious implications for the countries of Africa:

· A centerpiece of the EPAs is the elimination of tariffs on the majority of African countries’ tariff lines and the inability to introduce new export taxes. It would be impossible for the countries to industrialise, to develop their agriculture or diversify their economies under these conditions. In fact, the closing down of Africa’s industries will take place, as EU’s manufactured products and food are provided duty-free entry into our markets.

· Services liberalisation across the entire range of sectors will block the growth of domestic services in telecommunications, computer, business, distribution, transport, financial, utilities, energy etc.

· The EPAs will have a devastating effect on regional integration efforts. Some countries have signed the EPAs. Others within the same regional grouping, due to legitimate concerns of deindustrialization, unemployment, revenue losses, have not.

· The potential for regional trade integration would be lost. Many EU products are more competitive and will take more share of the African market once tariffs have been lowered. This African market is the top destination for our manufactured exports. In contrast, most of Africa’s exports to EU are by way of fuels and primary commodities. Regional trade is hence Africa’s best opportunity for industrialisation.

According to Mr Mkapa, the better options for Africa are as follows:

· For Africa to first concentrate on building our own internal regional production capacities, and to solidify our regional integration before we open up our markets and integrate with the EU.

· Least Developed Countries (LDCs) should not have to liberalise. They do not liberalise under the WTO’s Doha Round as their vulnerabilities have been recognized. They already have duty-free access to the EU market under the Everything But Arms (EBA) scheme of the EU. EPAs therefore provide no additional advantage for them.

· The 14 Non-LDCs in Africa that are negotiating the EPAs should be provided duty-free LDC treatment (i.e. EBA treatment by the EU) as economically, they are not very different from the LDCs.

Mr. Mkapa said that there are already several precedents in the WTO where non-reciprocal preferences are being given by the US (through AGOA to Africa as a region) and by the EU (to Moldova, and to several Balkan countries).

The EU can reform its Generalised System of Preferences (GSP) scheme to accommodate the 14 non-LDC African countries so that they have an LDC-type preference scheme. For instance, non-LDCs can be provided with this treatment when they are in customs unions with LDCs, or are in the process of forming such customs unions.

Alternatively, EU can also support Africa in seeking a waiver at the WTO for the provision of non-reciprocal market access on some tariff lines.

Such an approach would allow African countries to promote their development objectives as well as enable Africa to promote its regional integration goals. 

The South Centre Chairperson added that a political solution must be found, since the technical negotiations until now have led to an impasse, as African countries have defended their interests while the EC appears to stick to its aims. As a political solution is being sought, the preferences for the African countries should be maintained.

A briefing paper by the South Centre on the EPAs was also attached to the letter sent to the political leaders.

 
Implications of the EPAs for Africa

The South Centre has prepared a Policy Brief summarising the implications of the Economic Partnership Agreements (EPAs) on African countries that are negotiating these agreements with the European Union.

The paper examines (1) the Effects on industrial development, farmers' incomes and food security, African integration and Government Revenue; (2) Effects on the Policy Space of African Governments to Use Development Measures and to Counter the Economic Slowdown; (3) How the EPA Commitments Go Far Beyond African countries’ Obligations at the WTO and Doha Round; (4) Costs and Benefits for African countries in the EPAs, and (5) The Way Forward.

The following are excerpts of some of the issues in the policy brief.


Adverse Effects on Industry, Agriculture and Government Revenue

The EPAs will hamper Africa’s industrialisation and development prospects. The EU is requesting that African countries bring 80% of their tariffs to zero, and insisting on having rules on goods trade in the EPAs, such as heavily restricting the use of export taxes and disallowing increases in present applied tariff rates.

The EU also wants the EPAs to open up Africa's services sectors to European firms, as well as have chapters with complex rules in the areas of intellectual property rights, investment and financial flows, government procurement, competition law and policy. 

These rules will severely remove or restrict policy space, preventing African governments from using policy measures to boost local firms and the domestic economy.    

Implications: African countries will no longer have the trade policy flexibilities that can support, in a dynamic way, the objective of increasing production capacities both in the industrial and agricultural sectors. 

According to economists,all countries which have industrialized used infant-industry protection to do so. These infant industries change as countries move up the value chain. For this upgrading of industries, countries need the policy space to have different tariffs at different stages. The EPA’s requirement to eliminate tariffs on 80% of products will drastically reduce this policy space.

The EU is also demanding restrictions on the ability to impose new export taxes or to increase existing export taxes. Export taxes have been historically proven as an effective instrument for industrialisation and diversification. They enable countries to retain raw materials domestically and to process them or make manufacturing products out of them, and thus add value to the raw materials. Restricting export taxes will limit a crucial policy measure for promoting industrial development.

These EPA disciplines will make it significantly harder for African countries to move up the industrial value chain. They are thus likely to remain mainly exporters of primary commodities. 

African countries have also been losing their capacity to produce their own food – largely because structural adjustment policies have forced them to have low agricultural tariffs. Cheap subsidised imports have been displacing local farmers' products. These IMF/World Bank policies can be changed, or African countries can move out of these policies when they no longer depend on their loans. However, the EPAs require the import liberalisation of some of the agriculture sector, with some agricultural products having zero tariffs and this could make the old structural adjustment policies permanent.

Food import surges in Africa are already a major problem in products such as sugar, dairy, poultry, rice, and vegetable oils. These are likely to worsen after the EPAs take effect. There will thus be adverse effects on farmers' incomes and livelihoods and on national food security. This is particularly so because the EU continues to give huge domestic subsidies that reduce the cost of its exports (milk, poultry, pork, beef, cereals etc), allowing them to unfairly out-compete local products.

These subsidies are not being removed either at WTO or in the EPA negotiations. The playing field is therefore tilted against African countries. With the EPA imposing liberalisation to the extent of zero tariffs, African countries will have little or no defence against the subsidised products.

Government revenue will also be affected by the EPAs. Since most tariffs on goods from Europe will eventually be reduced to zero, African governments will experience a reduction in the collection of customs duties. As these duties are a significant source of overall revenue, governments will have less revenue to fund their budgets. This is a major problem especially during the present period of global economic slowdown and lower growth in Africa.   Estimates by the South Centre show that collectively, the 47 African countries negotiating EPAs will lose USD 4-5 billion a year in tariff revenue. It remains doubtful if the EU will provide sufficient, new, legally enforceable and permanent funding over and above existing sources to make up for this critical shortfall.

Major Effect on Regional Trade and Integration

Even though the EPAs are supposed to foster African regional integration, this desired outcome will not happen with the type of EPA that the EU is proposing. In fact, the EPAs will damage the trade integration process within Africa and undermine Africa's present and future regional integration efforts in a number of ways, a few of which are listed below.

Firstly, the regional configurations are already being changed by the way that different EPA regions have been chosen. 

Secondly, the current (and proposed) common external tariffs in African regions are being disturbed by some countries within a region initialing an EPA and others not wanting to join EPAs.

Thirdly, the EPAs may divert goods, services and government procurement from other African countries to trade with the EU.

Fourthly, the EU’s insistence on the abolition of the community levies which fund some of the secretariats responsible for African regional integration may mean a severe reduction of funding for these regional secretariats.

Africa is actually the biggest market for Sub-Saharan Africa's manufactured exports. Excluding South Africa, the exports of manufactures of SSA to Europe in 2008 are only USD 4.8 billion, while manufactured exports of SSA to Africa in that same year are USD 10 billion, i.e. more than double.

With the EPAs resulting in SSA’s tariff elimination on most industrial products, Africa’s imports of EU manufactured goods will increase and this will hinder the fairly vibrant intra-African trade of manufactured products that is taking place today.

Sub-Saharan African countries already have a ‘hubs and spokes’ trade relation with Europe: 90% of exports from SSA (excluding South Africa) to Europe are fuels and other primary products. Only 10% of exports to Europe are in the form of manufactured products. With the EPAs, this imbalance will be accentuated and African countries will continue to be raw materials exporters, whilst also increasing their imports of industrial products from the EU.

The best opportunity for Africa to industrialise is through the use of the regional African market. However, to continue and improve on this trend, tariffs must be kept, and they must be adjusted dynamically in accordance with the processes and stages of industrialisation. This is not possible with the EPAs, where African producers will have to compete with EU exports in their own national and regional markets.

EPAs will Restrict Policy Space to Use Development Measures

The EPAs include issues that go beyond trade in goods. They include services trade, intellectual property rights, as well as the “Singapore issues” (investment, competition policy and government procurement). The WTO rules on regional trade agreements do not require that a bilateral or regional trade agreement must contain services or any of these non-trade issues.

The inclusion of these issues would expand the EPAs into very large areas, some of which are bigger than trade. They would lead to liberalisation of services, investment and government procurement that would enable the entry of large European firms, which would eclipse the small local firms. Moreover, these rules would make it hard for African governments to support or give preference to local enterprises. For example, it would be difficult for governments to buy local products or provide contracts to local firms – they would be subjected to competitive bidding procedures with EU companies.

The EPAs would also make it more difficult for African governments to take measures to counter the global economic slowdown or to avoid the effects of financial instability.

(1) EPAs will Affect Local Services

The EU is advocating that the EPAs include a chapter on Services and Investment. This is not necessary because the WTO rules do not require bilateral or regional trade agreements to include services. However, the WTO rules (in the services agreement) indicate that if market access in services is to be included, then they should cover a substantial amount of service sectors.

Thus, the EU model of EPAs would result in African countries liberalising a significant number of their service sectors (that may include finance, distribution, wholesale and retail trade, telecommunications, utilities, etc). Since most African services firms are still small, it is premature to subject them to such a significant opening up to competition from large European firms. In recognition of this, the WTO allows developing countries to open up their services only at their own chosen pace, and it is agreed in the Doha Round that LDCs do not have to make any offers to liberalise their services.

However, since the EU is aggressively pushing for EPAs to contain provisions for significant opening up of services to European firms, the result could well be that African service enterprises would be overwhelmed, and many service sectors would end up being dominated by European firms.

Another EU proposal is to have rules that require “competition elements” under many of the service sectors. These elements restrict the ability of governments to provide a boost or an advantage to local enterprises.  

The services and investment provisions may also:

·    Reduce African countries’ ability to regulate foreign investments and to require foreign investors to transfer technology, form joint ventures with local firms (and thus share equity and profits), etc.

·    Reduce African countries' ability to ensure affordable universal access to essential services such as telecommunications and postal services.

·    Restrict their ability to do value addition through shipping on domestic or regional ships.

(2) EPAs contain “Singapore Issues” that Reduce Policy Space

The EU wants EPA negotiations to include the non-trade issues known as “Singapore Issues”, i.e. investment, competition policy and government procurement. If agreements are concluded on these issues, they will significantly reduce the ability to African governments to regulate the rights of European firms and investors to enter and participate in the domestic economy, while also curbing the ability of African governments to give preferences and assistance to local companies.

 The provisions on Investment would:

· Prohibit or severely limit African countries' ability to restrict and control the inflow and outflow of foreign capital and thus would adversely affect Africa’s ability to regulate the volatile flow of short-term capital, thus subjecting the countries to financial instability.

· Reduce African countries’ ability to regulate foreign investments and to require foreign investors to transfer technology, form joint ventures with local firms (and thus share equity and profits), etc.

· Expand the rights and status of foreign firms which are likely to gain dominance in various sectors, while crowding out domestic firms.

The provisions on Government Procurement would:

·    Curb the ability of African governments to give preferential treatment to local companies in the procurement of goods and services, or in the award of contracts for government projects. This is because European firms (or local firms acting for European companies) would have to be given national treatment or be treated in the same manner as local firms.

·    Affect the present practice of many African countries, in which government procurement policies are used as developmental tools to boost the growth of the domestic private sector and as social tools to promote the share in the economy of disadvantaged groups and communities.

·    Limit the use of government spending as an instrument for combatting recession, as there will be increased “leakage” via imports and foreign profits. 

On Competition Policy, it should be noted that:

·    In the competition chapter as well as in the Services chapter, the EPAs would introduce elements and definitions of “competition” that may be premature or inappropriate to conditions in African countries. This is because competition as conceptualised in the EPAs is designed to give effective equality of opportunities and market access to European products and firms. This will limit the ability of African governments to provide preferences and support to local enterprises, and to have partnerships between the public sector and the domestic private sector.

·    It is important that African countries and Africa as a region define and develop competition policy and law in their own way, to suit their national objectives and development needs, rather than have an inappropriate definition of competition policy and law imposed through a particular model in the EPAs.

(3) IPR Rules That Go Beyond WTO Obligations

The EU also wants intellectual property disciplines introduced into the full and comprehensive EPAs. These EPA rules go beyond the obligations of the WTO's TRIPS Agreement, and have several adverse effects.   

If the IPR rules are similar to those in the CARIFORUM-EU EPA, they will require the patenting of more technology (that is needed for manufacturing, research and development and to deal with climate change) and therefore make them more expensive.

It will also mean more medicines are patented. (The price difference due to patents can be seen in HIV/AIDS medicines: when they were patented, they were US$15,000 per patient per year. When they are not patented and so generic versions are available, they cost US$80 patient/year)

The EPAs may also contain stronger enforcement provisions and this would make it harder to import generic medicines. These provisions will also limit Africa’s ability to manufacture generic medicine, which provides medicine security. 

African countries will also be pressurised to join other intellectual property treaties in the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) that are against their interests.

Effects on Africa’s Ability to Counter Economic Crisis

The global financial crisis has provided lessons on the need for African governments to avoid the kind of financial speculation and financial bubbles that caused the crisis. The associated global economic slowdown also requires government measures and the consideration of policy options for new development strategies. The EPAs impede these two processes for the following reasons.

·    A major lesson of the financial crisis is that there is need to regulate the volatile flows of “hot money” or short-term capital, which can enter developing countries, cause bubbles in the stock market and property market, and then leave suddenly, causing economic devastation. However the EPAs require the free and unregulated flow of capital, thus preventing African governments from using capital controls, which are now recognised even by the IMF and the World Bank as being important measures in preventing financial volatility.

·    The EPAs promote financial liberalisation, which may result in the introduction of new foreign financial institutions and new financial instruments such as various types of derivatives, which are difficult to understand let alone regulate, thus increasing the risk of financial crises.

·    The increased imports of goods arising from comprehensive liberalisation of trade and of government procurement will likely result in a deterioration in the trade balance and the balance of payments in some African countries, reducing their foreign reserves and worsening their external debt situation. 

·    The reduction in tariff revenue will put a strain on the government budgets at a time when governments need to boost domestic demand and maintain or create social safety nets because of the economic slowdown.

·  The opening up of the government procurement market to foreign products and firms means that the macro-economic measure of increasing government spending (fiscal stimulus) will have limited effect due to leakage to imports and foreign profits.

·  As the global export markets slow down, African countries need to consider expanding the African regional market as a strategy to make up for reduced growth in traditional Western markets. However the EPAs may divert trade by increasing imports from Europe, and by the disturbance caused by the EPAs to African regional integration efforts.       

EPA Commitments Would Go Far Beyond African Countries’ WTO Commitments

African countries have fought hard and successfully to make gains in the WTO and in the Doha Round in many areas. However, many of the provisions in the EPAs contradict the African positions in the WTO and would remove or reduce the gains that Africa has made.

·  African countries have to abolish tariffs on most tariff lines in the EPAs. At the WTO, the LDCs in the Doha Round of trade negotiations need not undertake any liberalization commitments. This is because the WTO recognizes their economic vulnerability. Most African non-LDCs have been recognized as ‘small and vulnerable economies’ and are only required to undertake lenient liberalization commitments. The EU demands that African countries have zero tariffs for most of their products under the EPAs contradicts what the African countries are allowed in the WTO and in the Doha Round.   

·  EPAs prevent African countries from introducing new export taxes, or make this very difficult. The WTO allows countries to continue with export taxes which enable them to process their commodities and diversify their economies. 

·  EPAs contain a Most Favoured Nation (MFN) clause that makes it obligatory for African countries to offer EU improved market access if they have offered this to another major economy (e.g. China, India or Brazil). This will discourage China, India, Brazil etc from negotiating South-South trade agreements with Africa. This is contrary to the WTO’s permission for preferential South-South trade.

· EU is asking African countries under the EPAs to liberalise in most services sectors (contradicting the fact that LDCs do not have to liberalise any services sector in the Doha Round and non-LDCs can liberalise at their own chosen pace); and introduce more stringent IP standards (even though LDCs are exempted from them in WTO).

· African countries successfully joined other developing countries to remove the Singapore issues (investment, competition and government procurement) from the Doha agenda in the WTO because of their adverse effects on development. However, the EU is insisting that the EPAs contain these same issues.

High costs, Little Benefits

The costs of EPAs to Africa are high and many of them are permanent. The costs include the loss of tariff revenue, the damage caused to domestic industry and agriculture due to displacement by imports, the premature opening up of service sectors, the loss of the policy space required for investment and government procurement, reduced ability to address the economic slowdown caused by global crisis, and disturbance caused to Africa's regional integration efforts.

Yet there are little benefits to be derived from the EPAs by African countries. There are no extra benefits for the 33 LDC countries. This is because they already have the EU’s Everything But Arms (EBA) scheme, providing all LDCs with 100% duty and quota-free market access.

For the 14 non-LDCs, the EPAs would enable them to retain their preferences (zero duty access to the EU market). However, this preferential access is quickly eroding as the EU has signed or is signing free trade agreements with many other countries. Moreover the Doha Round when it concludes will further erode the preference margins. Thus the retention of preferences through the EPAs would have decreasing benefits which are also temporary, compared to the permanent losses and costs.

Many African countries are hoping that the EPAs will bring extra aid. But so far there is little evidence that any significant new funds are forthcoming. The EU is simply re-categorising existing funding – what some have termed ‘reheating’ existing funds. Due to the present financial crisis in Europe, it is even more unlikely that there will be new funds through the EPAs.

 
South Centre Breakfast Meeting with Ministers on IP and Development Agenda

By Nirmalya Syam

The South Centre organized a breakfast meeting for Ministers of the 20 countries in the Development Agenda Group on 21 September 2010 on the sidelines of the WIPO General Assembly.

The meeting, held in Hotel Inter-Continental in Geneva, was co-organised with the Development Agenda Group (DAG), which has been active in promoting the Development Agenda initiative to reform the WIPO, so as to make intellectual property policies and WIPO activities development-oriented.

The Coordinator of the DAG, Ambassador Hisham Badr of Egypt, stated that the objective of DAG is to promote a balanced intellectual property regime. He introduced the DAG as a second generation group that seeks to build on the work of the Group of Friends of Development that had played a central role in the adoption of the Development Agenda in WIPO.

This meeting was aimed at informing delegates from the capitals about the DAG issues, challenges and priorities.

South Centre Executive Director Martin Khor welcomed the formation of DAG and said that developing countries have taken a very important step by organizing themselves and advocating an appropriate balance between development and IP protection. The fundamental principle is that IP should be a tool for economic and social development.

To strike a right balance between IP protection and development needs, developing countries need to ensure that flexibilities are made available and used by developing countries. The flexibilities in the TRIPS Agreement was an acknowledgement of the need to balance IP protection with development needs.

In WIPO, there is need for balanced development of IP norms, and appropriate technical assistance, to ensure proper balance between IP and development. There is a need for reforming the technical assistance programme of WIPO, its approach on national IP strategy, and also address issues of TRIPS plus IP enforcement. WIPO needs to review norms to ensure a balance between IP protection and development.

Mr. Khor also cautioned about the impact of TRIPS plus IP protection and enforcement provisions in free trade agreements being negotiated by developed countries with many developing countries. Provisions relating to IPRs and investment protection could deny developing countries the possibility of making use of policy flexibilities.

Professor Carlos Correa said that today developing countries are constrained to develop their IP policies in a manner that may not suit their level of development. However, this was not always the case. During most of the 19th century, in the United States copyright protection was deliberately denied to foreigners to ensure access to cheap books for education purposes. For a long time, Switzerland did not have a patent protection system because of concerns that patent protection can impede the development of the national industry.

Therefore, there is need for caution in accepting the principle that IP automatically promotes development. IP doesn’t work in the same way in different countries. A very strong IP system in a country with weak science and technology and capital base may actually hamper innovation. IP does not automatically lead to innovation and creativity.

Prof. Correa also pointed out that there is no particular rationale why there should be patent protection for a minimum period of 20 years as required under the TRIPS Agreement. The objective of developed countries in WIPO and other multilateral forums has been to seek harmonization of patentability standards. However, the diversity of patentability standards is an important flexibility for developing countries. Thus, we need to preserve the capacity of designing IP law and policy in a manner that is appropriate to our levels of development. In this regard, the Development Agenda is of high importance.

Prof. Correa expressed concern about the role of WIPO in some areas like climate change, biodiversity, public health, food security, etc. The draft Medium Term Strategic Plan (MTSP) proposed by the WIPO Secretariat suggests that WIPO should play a leadership role in these areas. However, the WIPO member states have not provided a clear opinion on these matters. There is a danger that views expressed by the WIPO secretariat may be wrongly perceived as the views of the Member States of WIPO on these issues.

Ms. Viviana Munoz Tellez of the South Centre’s programme on Innovation and Access to Knowledge stressed that in developing countries IP laws and policy should be tailored to national development goals and they should avoid harmonization with foreign laws that may not be appropriate for their stage of development. IP is not just about the grant and administration of IPs, but is intrinsically linked to public policy, including in areas of technological development, health and agriculture.

Ms. Munoz pointed out that the tradition in WIPO has been one of promoting the interests of right holders. The WIPO Development Agenda is a vehicle for developing countries to influence multilateral IP norm-setting and to reshape WIPO technical assistance to support the matching of national IP laws with development goals. Developing countries must be in the driver seat of the process. 

Some of the important issues for developing countries in WIPO are discussions on exceptions and limitations to copyright, including to facilitate use by visually impaired persons; negotiations towards the establishment of international instruments for the effective protection of traditional knowledge and folklore; discussions on technology transfer, open innovation models and safeguarding the public domain; and advancing governance reforms.

Following the presentations there was a lively discussion, with many comments from Ministers and senior officials. One delegate said that “flexibility” should not be a heresy in WIPO and it must be recognized that IP rights are not the goal, but a tool. The services of WIPO must be primarily for its Member States and not only for right holders.

Another senior official said there is a need to reinvent WIPO. He expressed concern about the kind of monopoly profits being made in the name of IP. Concern was raised about generic medicines being targeted in the name of counterfeiting, and the practice of evergreening of patents. He stressed on the need to counter the TRIPS plus enforcement agenda.

Another delegate pointed out the need in the capitals to develop a common framework on IP with a coherent strategy on IP in different Ministries and in all international forums. There is also a need to develop a common agenda among developing countries.

Another official observed that new TRIPS plus agreements like ACTA can widen the gap between developed and developing countries.

It was also observed that technical assistance tends to be mainly focused on how to implement existing imbalanced rules, and rarely to address how to use the IP rules to promote development.

Most delegations strongly affirmed the importance of the DAG, the need to coordinate better between the Geneva Missions and the policy makers in capitals, and called on the South Centre to strengthen its assistance to the DAG.

Mr. Khor reaffirmed the South Centre’s commitment to assist developing countries in all these issues, particularly to develop a national IP strategy that is development-oriented, to organize workshops and continue to provide advice.

 

 

 
<< Début < Précédent 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 Suivant > Fin >>

Page 39 sur 62