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Regional integration remains low, says African Regional Integration Index (ARI)

The Southern African Development Community (SADC) is the most integrated region in terms of trade, with South Africa as the most integrated country on the continent. (Image source: United Nations Economic Commission for Africa)

The preliminary findings of the upcoming 2019 African Regional Integration Index, released at the Conference of Ministers in Morocco on Saturday, indicate that regional integration in Africa remains low

The Index, known as ARII, was set up to monitor and evaluate the status of economic integration among African countries and provides a basis for member States to track their progress.

The findings reveal that the Southern African Development Community (SADC) is the most integrated region in terms of trade, with South Africa as the most integrated country on the continent.

In the five areas that were analysed such as trade integration, regional infrastructure, productive integration, free movement of people and macroeconomic integration, South Africa topped the ranking; with South Sudan as the least integrated mainly because of its modest performance in regional infrastructure and financial integration.

Meanwhile, integration in services contributed more than 53 per cent of the continent’s GDP, but ratification of the protocol on the free movement of people has been slow, despite the 2016 launch of the Common Electronic Biometric African Passport, and the AU Protocol on Free Movement of Persons. The Continent’s large infrastructure deficit remains a major hindrance to intra-regional trade.

“It is up to Africans themselves to ensure that the initiative benefits them through hard work and efficient implementation of the mechanisms of the CFTA,” said David Luke, coordinator of the African Trade Policy Centre, regional integration and trade division of Economic Commission of Africa (ECA).

Leila Mokadem, country manager and resident representative in Morocco for the African Development Bank (AfDB), added that despite the ‘tremendous’ political support for the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA), there are still major challenges ahead in terms of implementation and pushing the agenda forward to meet the goal of increasing intra-African trade to 25 per cent by 2023 from between 15 per cent and 18 per cent currently.

She cited that weak productive capacity in Africa, high production costs, large infrastructure deficits and other challenges that affected Africa’s competitiveness. This is compounded by the number of small markets and 16 landlocked countries.

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