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Talitha Bertelsmann-Scott Research Associate – South African Institute of International Affairs (SAIIA) 20 February 2013

Cap40: overcoming barriers to trade in southern africa

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Page 1: Cap40: overcoming barriers to trade in southern africa

Talitha Bertelsmann-Scott

Research Associate – South African Institute of International Affairs (SAIIA)

20 February 2013

Page 2: Cap40: overcoming barriers to trade in southern africa
Page 3: Cap40: overcoming barriers to trade in southern africa

•  Combined population of 273 million consumers •  9.8 million km2 surface area – roughly the same

as China or US •  Dynamic growth area in time were West is

stagnating •  From 2000-2010 GDP in the region grew by 45% •  Mineral resource deposit significant with new

finds in Mozambique, Tanzania, Malawi •  Water rich countries like Lesotho, Zambia •  South Africa dominates

Page 4: Cap40: overcoming barriers to trade in southern africa

�  In comparison to N and W-Africa, quite small � DRC and Madgascar has French connection

(Seychelles and Mauritius) � Physical Embassies throughout Southern Africa

with dedicated economic relations departments in South Africa, Mozambique and Angola

� Mozambique – •  investment of around €1 million per annum with a total

stock of €9 million •  21 Companies with 10,000 employees in primary sectors,

services (Bureau Veritas, Sofreco), energy (Total), construction (Razel, Soletanche Bachy) and engineering (Alstom)

Page 5: Cap40: overcoming barriers to trade in southern africa

� Angola – •  Trade balance in favour of Angola: France

imports large amounts of oil and little else •  Exports from France also largely for oil industry

and some household products •  France third largest investor in Angola in

agriculture, services, pharmaceuticals and oil •  French companies employ around 20,000

workers

Page 6: Cap40: overcoming barriers to trade in southern africa

� South Africa •  Largest and most diversified presence •  France is ranked as the 9th largest investor in

South Africa, with •  203 French companies with 29 000 employees •  investment value of €1,3bn

Page 7: Cap40: overcoming barriers to trade in southern africa

� Low levels of trade •  Africa accounts for <2.5% of world trade •  Intra-Africa trade is low: only around 10-12% -

compared to EU of around 60% � Africa relies heavily on exports of

commodities •  This reliance has led to debt crisis and poor income

distribution •  Need diversified opportunities to trade, profit from

larger markets � 7 African countries in bottom ten most

restrictive trade regimes

Page 8: Cap40: overcoming barriers to trade in southern africa

� Economic scene dominated by •  Large companies – sustained and inclusive

growth, employment should come from SMME’s � Trading environment difficult for small operators

•  South Africa – � Retail, another important growth and employment

sector is dominated by SA companies: Shoprite, Game, Woolworths change in operations

� Services: Banking – Standard Bank, Communications � Construction contracts predominantly

won by Chinese firms in recent years

Page 9: Cap40: overcoming barriers to trade in southern africa

� Other success areas include SAB Miller, British American Tobacco, Distell, SAA

� South African dominance is such that even successful regional companies relocate to make use of value-chains, markets, distribution networks •  Windhoek Lager

� Yet increasingly facing competition from Brazil, Russia, India, China (BRIC) nations

Page 10: Cap40: overcoming barriers to trade in southern africa
Page 11: Cap40: overcoming barriers to trade in southern africa

� Since end of apartheid countries unified in Southern African Development Community (SADC)

� 15 Member States, but Madagascar suspended

� Why Regional Integration? •  Overcome problem of small markets, political

fragmentation, huge cost of infrastructure development, policy lock-in effect

� Model integration on European Union example of linear integration •  From free trade area to political union (?)

Page 12: Cap40: overcoming barriers to trade in southern africa
Page 13: Cap40: overcoming barriers to trade in southern africa

� Free Trade Area – remove tariffs on significant amount of products between parties, maintain external tariffs (2012)

� Customs Union – remove internal border controls and only have one set of tariff codes for all countries (2015)

� Common Market – unified standards and practices, labour mobility(2016)

� Monetary Union – Common currency (2018) � Sovereignty ceded to regional authority at

each step

Page 14: Cap40: overcoming barriers to trade in southern africa

� Currently excludes DRC, Angola, Seychelles and Madagascar

� 85% of tariffs were liberalised in 2008, moving closer to 95% coverage by end last year

� Number of exclusions remain � Advantages in import to South Africa –

markets where overlap like Tanzania and Kenya

Page 15: Cap40: overcoming barriers to trade in southern africa

� Advantages in export where market share competes with East African produce

� In theory this should apply to Asian competitors but in general terms Asian countries hold price advantage despite tariff advantage

� SADC FTA progress in increasing trade but not enough to ensure movement of goods

Page 16: Cap40: overcoming barriers to trade in southern africa

� Five countries in SADC belong to a customs union •  South Africa, Botswana, Lesotho, Namibia and

Swaziland •  Overhang from colonial times •  South Africa collects customs revenue and

shares all between BLNS � Effectively development assistance �  If expanded the BLNS are sure to lose out �  Lesotho, Swaziland resource 50% of fiscal income

� Real agenda of SADC?

Page 17: Cap40: overcoming barriers to trade in southern africa

� Realisitic within Southern and Eastern African context

� South Africa increasingly leaning towards postponing further integration in favour of another bigger FTA with East Africa •  Tripartite FTA – as it will include all states in

COMESA and East African Community •  26 States = free trade from Cape Town to Cairo

� BUT it is not enough to bring tariffs down •  Enforcement not effective without regional court

Page 18: Cap40: overcoming barriers to trade in southern africa
Page 19: Cap40: overcoming barriers to trade in southern africa
Page 20: Cap40: overcoming barriers to trade in southern africa

� Poor infrastructure � Lengthy waiting times at borders � Corruption � Non Tariff Barriers – very difficult to

monitor and control � Insurance � Financing � Poor consumers � Dominance of South African retail stores

Page 21: Cap40: overcoming barriers to trade in southern africa

� Many focus on trade facilitation in order to increase SADC trade

� Focus on reducing complexity and cost of trade transaction in order to increase efficiency, transparency and predictability of trade but to maintain government control where necessary

� It costs $5000-$8000 to ship a 20ft container from Durban to Lusaka but only $1,500 to ship from Japan to Durban

Page 22: Cap40: overcoming barriers to trade in southern africa

� Only so much that can be achieved on policy level

� Trade facilitation next step towards increasing intra-regional trade

� Donors and governments have adopted a corridor approach towards trade facilitation

� North-South corridor – connecting Eastern states to Durban and Dar es Salaam Ports and develop Maputo

Page 23: Cap40: overcoming barriers to trade in southern africa
Page 24: Cap40: overcoming barriers to trade in southern africa

North-­‐South  

Northern  

Central  

Nacala  

Maputo  

Beira  Trans-­‐Cunene  

Namibe  

Malanje  

Trans-­‐Caprivi  

Lobito-­‐Benguela  

Dar  es  Salaam  

Trans-­‐Kalahari  

Ethiopia  -­‐  Djibou?  

Western Cluster

N-S Cluster

Eastern Cluster

EAC Cluster

Corridor Management Committees: Transport Corridors have their own management structures that are usually established through a MoU between the countries the corridor transits through. Efforts are being made to “cluster corridors and to manage the corridors in clusters.

Page 25: Cap40: overcoming barriers to trade in southern africa

Corridors along the top Focus Areas and Corridor Layers

Click on a road section

Page 26: Cap40: overcoming barriers to trade in southern africa

Click on a document

Page 27: Cap40: overcoming barriers to trade in southern africa
Page 28: Cap40: overcoming barriers to trade in southern africa
Page 29: Cap40: overcoming barriers to trade in southern africa
Page 30: Cap40: overcoming barriers to trade in southern africa

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Page 31: Cap40: overcoming barriers to trade in southern africa

OSBP – On-going work at Chirundu Border Post

Journey times on NSC typically 1/3 driving and 2/3 waiting. Most effective way to reduce costs is to reduce waiting times at borders. This can be done by converting to OSBP but need to address: physical facilities (common control zone with a fenced perimeter, common facilities – scanning, weighbridges and inspection bays); operations and training; and legal framework (extraterritorial jurisdiction).

Chirundu can be said to be now truly operating as a OSBP. Have been challenges (such as how to address transit fraud) but procedures now signed off so out-standing issues (signage, additional training, fibre across bridge, preparation of a performance charter and final modifications to buildings) can now be completed.

Page 32: Cap40: overcoming barriers to trade in southern africa

Border Crossing Monitoring:

Have relat ively sophist icated border monitoring processes based on a GPS truck tracking system. The system tracks “queuing” times as well as border clearing times.

28   28  

32   32   32  

25  

30  

21  23  

24  

21  23  

0  

5  

10  

15  

20  

25  

30  

35  

juil.-­‐07   août-­‐07   sept.-­‐07   oct.-­‐07   nov.-­‐07   déc.-­‐07  

Avg  hours  to  cross  from  Zimbabwe  to  Zambia  

Avg  hours  to  cross  from  Zambia  to  Zimbabwe  

Page 33: Cap40: overcoming barriers to trade in southern africa

36%

65%

Border Crossing Time reduced by >1/3

Nr of Vehicles increased by 2/3

Note: Before December 2009, average border crossing time was between 72 and 120 hours

Page 34: Cap40: overcoming barriers to trade in southern africa

Note: Chirundu average border crossing time down to 25 hours in June 2012

Page 35: Cap40: overcoming barriers to trade in southern africa
Page 36: Cap40: overcoming barriers to trade in southern africa

� Exisiting surveys from many organisations, including World Bank, but no accessible case studies

� Developed a list of barriers from exisiting work and validated against firm level interviews

� 50 Case studies in 10 countries (+Moz) � Initial findings show correlation but with

striking differences

Page 37: Cap40: overcoming barriers to trade in southern africa

Customs  RegulaGons  

29%  

CorrupGon  11%  

Skilled  Labour  13%  Inefficient  

Bureaucracy  11%  

Infrastructure  27%  

Access  to  Finance  9%  

All  

SAIIA

Page 38: Cap40: overcoming barriers to trade in southern africa

0%  

5%  

10%  

15%  

20%  

25%  

30%  

35%  

40%  

45%  

50%  

Customs  RegulaGons  

CorrupGon  

Skilled  Labour  

Inefficient  Bureaucracy  

Infrastructure  

Access  to  Finance  

SAIIA

Page 39: Cap40: overcoming barriers to trade in southern africa

0%

5%

10%

15%

20%

25%

30%

35%

40%

45%

Customs Regulations

Corruption Skilled Labour Inefficient Bureaucracy

Infrastructure

South Africa

Botswana

Lesotho

Namibia

Swaziland

Page 40: Cap40: overcoming barriers to trade in southern africa

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

Customs Regulations

Corruption Skilled Labour Inefficient Bureaucracy

Infrastructure Access to Finance

SACU

Non-SACU

Page 41: Cap40: overcoming barriers to trade in southern africa

0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60%

Customs Regulations

Corruption

Skilled Labour

Inefficient Bureaucracy

Infrastructure

Tax rates

Exchange rates/FOREX/Banking

Malawi

DRC

South Africa

Page 42: Cap40: overcoming barriers to trade in southern africa

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

14

16

18

20

Page 43: Cap40: overcoming barriers to trade in southern africa

� Of the opinion that if corruption could be done away with, the other barriers would automatically resolve themselves

� Customs clearance – three advantages in DFZ •  Special lane at border •  Customs officials visit on site •  Limited paper work due to duty exemption

� Infrastructure •  Government has invested in ports in order to satisfy

demands/needs of oil and aluminum companies

Page 44: Cap40: overcoming barriers to trade in southern africa

� Infrastructure •  Don’t make much use of the roads •  Ample electricity, water •  Additional oil, gas and coal finds might

overburden existing ports � Banking

•  Despite or perhaps due to large figures involved they’ve not had any difficulty in moving funds in or out of Mozambique

� Message – it pays to be big •  Also evident from other case studies

Page 45: Cap40: overcoming barriers to trade in southern africa

� Weighbridges most often mentioned as significant NTB •  Readings differ, payment options limited, no security

for trucks •  Roadblocks – unpredictable, have to plan ahead to

be corrupt � Labour market – permit system

•  Mozambique very clear and efficient system •  Other end of the scale – large sums but no pos result •  Large companies rotate staff globally for skills

training, but very difficult in Southern Africa

Page 46: Cap40: overcoming barriers to trade in southern africa

� E-platform – recent introduction in SA •  Welcomed by Road Freight Association •  E-platforms frequently mentioned as solution to

delays and corruption •  BUT e-platform seems to have added to delays � Border officials still want to the paperwork �  Infrastructure at borders problematic

� Paperwork for mixed consignment of fresh produce easily a foot deep

Page 47: Cap40: overcoming barriers to trade in southern africa

� Size matter as larger companies can outsource logistics, customs clearance or appoint in-house expertise

� Hierarchy of stumbling blocs associated with development •  Banking, access to forex important barriers in

DRC, Malawi not so in South Africa rest of SACU •  Corruption headache for South Africans wanting

to do business in DRC, for DRC locals accepted as normal costs associated with doing business

Page 48: Cap40: overcoming barriers to trade in southern africa

� For SACU companies, greater focus on efficiencies and predictability

� Infrastructure in Southern-SADC has improved dramatically, •  only mentioned in context of physical border

infrastructure � North still lagging far behind and

weather dependent •  Time to get goods across borders and to point of

sale varies from shipment to shipment

Page 49: Cap40: overcoming barriers to trade in southern africa
Page 50: Cap40: overcoming barriers to trade in southern africa

� PS interesting position: beneficiary, implementor, driver, stumbling block

� Very limited engagement at the regional level

� National engagement as well as bilateral •  Mixed results

� Exception is telecommunications that has effective tool in CRASA •  Again, it pays to be big, telecom huge tax revenue

and profits, mutual benefit in engagement

Page 51: Cap40: overcoming barriers to trade in southern africa

� SADC-wide business visa � More effective SADC e-platform that

gives regular updates on tariffs, excise and other developments

� SADC Rules of Origin certificates to become more easily obtainable

� Uniform regional weighbridge system and clearance

Page 52: Cap40: overcoming barriers to trade in southern africa
Page 53: Cap40: overcoming barriers to trade in southern africa

� Where does it leave companies in SA wanting to trade with neighbouring states? •  Western Cape well placed ito access to

Mozambique •  Retail sourcing practices in local agriculture

beneficial •  Growing middle-class in SADC means increased

wine sales •  Cape Town Port industry missing out vis Maputo,

Dar es Salaam, Walvis Bay, Luanda

Page 54: Cap40: overcoming barriers to trade in southern africa

� Small companies •  Know the risks – waiting times, corruption, NTB’s •  High risk, high reward? •  Feed into value-chain of larger operators •  Participate in regional forums for private sector •  Read www.thetradebeat.com - research findings •  Report NTB’s – www.tradebarriers.org •  Subscribe to TMSA newsletter

Page 55: Cap40: overcoming barriers to trade in southern africa

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