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All countries on the continent, he added, were under-utilising their
national resources to boost growth and development - not just by
diversifying export markets, but also in areas such as taxation. More
aid was needed but would only be effective in combination with a
country's own efforts at encouraging investment and economic growth, he
emphasised.
For other countries, there are tariff barriers of up to 25 percent on
processed goods that prevented such diversification. Textiles was one
such industry where Africa had a comparative advantage, said Hakim Ben
Hammouda, director, trade and regional integration division of the ECA,
but in this respect the international trading structure was prohibitive.
Other hindrances to diversification included HIV/AIDS, which undermines
labour productivity and labour supply, as well as incurring indirect
costs to the economy in the form of sick days, home care, etc; and poor
infrastructure and unreliable energy supplies at national and regional
levels, which are detrimental to trade.
The ECA recommends a three-pronged approach: macroeconomic policies to
support diversification; trade policies to deepen diversification; and
strengthening institutions to support such efforts. Flexible
macroeconomic policies that encouraged investment were crucial, it
added.
African economies were still too reliant on primary commodity exports,
which made them especially vulnerable to external shocks, such as a
global slowdown, but the ECA believed Asian demand for African exports
was sufficient to offset any potential decline in western European and
American growth this year. The prospect of another spike in the oil
price was good for oil-exporting countries on the continent, and should
have only a limited impact on oil-importers, as long as improved
economic management and commodity exports were sufficient, said the ECA.
In 2006, higher oil prices had a limited impact on countries that did
not have oil or minerals to export, thanks to debt relief and higher aid
flows, as well as improved agricultural output and prices.
Source:
Irin, 05 April 2005
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