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Central African countries prepare free trade product categorisation

The focus is on shielding certain goods and partially protecting others from free trade as part measures towards maintaining a certain level of stability in fiscal income, food security and the promotion of industrialisation. (Image source: Jason Goh/Pixabay)

Central African countries were recently urged to align their external trade data classification system, with the 2017 World Customs Organization’s Harmonised System (HS17) for identifying products which will be categorised as ‘free,’ ‘sensitive’ and ‘excluded’ within the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) regime

The call was made by experts from the Subregional Office for Central Africa of the UN Economic Commission for Africa (ECA), others from the ECCAS General Secretariat and the CEMAC Commission and representatives from 11 countries that straddle these economic communities, during the first meeting of the Boosting Intra-African Trade (BIAT) Regional Taskforce for Central Africa, held in Douala, Cameroon.

The experts examined and validated a list of 379 products termed sensitive (seven per cent of tradable products as per the HS17), 172 products considered excluded (three per cent of tradable products) and rest of products termed free (90 per cent of tradable products), to be presented to the next AfCFTA negotiating rounds, as the consensual taxonomy for free and restricted items to be traded in Central Africa.

According to the experts, with the fast-approaching operationalisation of the AfCFTA, Central African States, like countries belonging to other regional economic communities, needed to carefully consider totally shielding certain goods and partially protecting others from free trade as part measures towards maintaining a certain level of stability in fiscal income, food security and the promotion of industrialisation.

Examples of excluded goods proposed are meat, fish and cocoa, while some goods considered sensitive include live poultry, crude palm oil and milk.

The meeting noted that the situation is complex for Central Africa, given that many countries in the subregion have based their inventory of free, sensitive and excluded goods on a template called HS12 (The 2012 World Customs Organization’s Harmonised System) which is no longer in force as per the latest advice of the African Union Ministers of Trade. The trade ministers recommend that product categorization must be based on the template code-named HS17, hinged on their external trade records from 2015 to 2017.

Due to tight deadlines, the Douala meeting advised that CEMAC member States (who are also members of ECCAS) having the same tariff regime, to propose a collective list of products while the other countries belonging exclusively to ECCAS, present their bids of product categorisation, individually, in the meantime.

While, underscoring the importance of BIAT to facilitate the project of an African common market through seven practical pillars, and congratulating countries of the Central African subregion on elaborating the BIAT plan of action and constituting a taskforce for following it up, the ECCAS deputy secretary-general in charge of Physical, Economic and Monetary Integration, Marie Therese Chantal Mfoula, reminded member States that rolling out the AfCFTA was the ultimate trophy in sight, hence the need for all countries in the subregion to ratify its framework agreement.

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