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Discussion


SADC Tribunal Saga continues before the South African Courts

Gerhard Erasmus, tralac Associate, comments on the High Court hearing into the continued suspension of the SADC Tribunal and implications for rules-based integration and trade in the region

An unprecedented application has been set down for hearing, by the High Court in Pretoria, on 5-7 February 2018. The Court is asked to declare President Zuma’s support of the suspension of the Tribunal of the Southern African Development Community (SADC), by the Summit in 2011, and the adoption of a SADC Protocol in 2014 to establish a new Tribunal (without power to hear complaints by individuals) unconstitutional, in breach of South Africa’s international obligations, and invalid. President Jacob Zuma is, by implication, accused of being party to the denial of human rights to millions of people in SADC.

The application is brought by the Law Society of South Africa (which has abandoned an earlier application involving the same matter), four Zimbabwean nationals, two Zimbabwean companies resident in Zimbabwe, the Southern African Litigation Centre (SALC), and the Centre for Applied Legal Studies (CALS). They claim that the President’s actions were irrational, that the constitutional right of access to court has been violated, and that prior public consultations had to take place.

The SADC Tribunal came into operation in 2005 and rendered about 15 judgments (all applications were brought by private parties) before it was suspended in 2011. This followed a ruling in 2010 in favour of a Zimbabwean citizen (Mr Campbell) that the expropriation, without compensation, by the Mugabe government of his private land was in violation of the SADC Treaty. The SADC Treaty does not contain a “bill of rights” or a property clause, but in its Article 4 it is stated that SADC and its Member States shall act in accordance with certain principles, such as sovereign equality of all Member States, solidarity, peace and security; and human rights, democracy and the rule of law, equity, balance and mutual benefit; and peaceful settlement of disputes. Article 6 of the SADC Treaty deals with General Undertakings and stipulates that Member States “undertake to adopt adequate measures to promote the achievement of the objectives of SADC, and shall refrain from taking any measure likely to jeopardise the sustenance of its principles, the achievement of its objectives and the implementation of the provisions of this Treaty.”

In the Campbell case the then SADC Tribunal employed these treaty provisions as the basis for ruling against Zimbabwe. The rest is history.

President Zuma’s legal team argues that a South African Court has now been asked to venture into “the heartland of the executive’s exclusive competence in foreign policy and international relations”. This will violate the separation of powers doctrine. In addition, the right of access to court does not guarantee access to international courts and, therefore, does not apply. There is also no constitutional duty to conduct public hearings in respect of executive actions of the kind under investigation. They further argue that this application was brought too late in respect of the 2011 decision (to suspend the original Tribunal) and too early as far as the adoption of the new Protocol is concerned. The new Protocol has not yet been ratified, is not in force, and has not yet been submitted to the South African Parliament in terms of Section 231 of the South African Constitution.

This matter could go all the way to the Constitutional Court. However, it is not quite clear what the nature of an effective remedy could be if the application succeeds. The relief sought is only for an order to declare the 2011 and 2014 actions by the President invalid. The Court is not asked to give domestic effect to any of SADC’s legal instruments. Neither is it argued that South African citizens (or persons in South Africa) require a right of appeal to a SADC Tribunal should the South African Constitutional Court fail to “protect” them. Their application has this implication.

South African courts have no jurisdiction over SADC or its Member States in disputes about the application or interpretation of SADC legal instruments. It is inconceivable to foresee an order instructing the President (or his successor) to return to Gaborone to withdraw South Africa’s earlier support for the contested Summit resolutions. Apart from being an unimaginable embarrassment, it would have no effect on the validity of the decisions already taken by an international organization with its own legal personality. SADC Summit decisions are taken on the basis of consensus; not unanimity.

The fact that this matter is argued exclusively from a national constitutional and human rights angle, results in an inadequate discussion of SADC’s critical features. SADC is not a regional human rights arrangement; it is a Regional Economic Community (REC). Its main purpose is to pursue deeper economic integration among its Members. This process is in its early stages. It is true that SADC has, over time, adopted several other Protocols (in addition to the Protocol on Trade) dealing with regional peace, political cooperation, water, gender, etc. However, the objectives so agreed are formulated and pursued as intergovernmental endeavours. Each of these instruments needs careful scrutiny to discover the nature and extent of the obligations accepted. Such a process should be guided by Article 31 of the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties: A treaty shall be interpreted in good faith in accordance with the ordinary meaning to be given to the terms of the treaty in their context and in the light of its object and purpose. The SADC legal instruments are of the standard public international law kind.

SADC does not have supranational institutions to which the Member States have ceded national sovereignty. In fact, deeper regional integration in Africa is a difficult exercise and a challenge for countries at different levels of economic development. SADC, like the World Trade Organization (WTO), is primarily a member-driven organization. This may be unfortunate but is the present reality.

In its present form SADC has institutional deficits and lacks democratic legitimacy. However, Courts of law should take cognisance of what the Member States have been prepared to accept as binding international obligations. The SADC Treaty does not oblige the Members to give domestic effect of a new branch of law, SADC Community Law, as the European Union has done. SADC’s integration agenda is much more modest.

It should also be pointed out that the governments of the Member States are protective of their sovereignty. They do not litigate against each other over the violation of mutually agreed obligations. The SADC Tribunal never entertained an application by a Member State or a SADC organ. The starkest reminder of the failure to bring about a rules-based arrangement, is provided by the Zimbabwean example. Harare has for several years now violated its obligations under the SADC Protocol on Trade and has done so with impunity.

The most immediate challenge with regard to bringing SADC closer to a rules-based arrangement lies with the Member States. They should comply with the obligations accepted as part of SADC membership. Dispute settlement should be practiced; it is not an offence to the dignity of another sovereign state. It is, in fact, a confirmation of sovereignty to honour international legal obligations freely entered into. And the most effective protection of human rights is ensured via justiciable national constitutions. Is the implication (of the application before the Pretoria High Court) that SADC Member States without such domestic arrangements have accepted a binding Bill of Rights via the SADC Treaty; to be enforced by a supranational SADC Tribunal?

A fundamental question confronts sovereign states when they enter into regional integration arrangements: How far are they prepared to travel on the road of integration? There should be legal certainty regarding the scope and depth of their undertaking, the implementation of obligations, and the relationship between regional and domestic legal spheres. SADC has not addressed these basic issues.

The case now before the Pretoria High Court is a remarkable one but also an indictment of SADC. Some SADC citizens have decided to take recourse to domestic legal avenues. This is an unconventional step. Hopefully it will inspire a new and inclusive discourse about SADC and its operations. However, basic design issues need to be clarified before regional human rights will become a dominant feature of SADC.

Read this Discussion and its sources on tralac’s website...

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Special Features


Special Notice – tralac Annual Conference 2018

Please note that since the Extraordinary AU Summit scheduled for the signing of the Continental Free Trade Area (CFTA) will now take place in Kigali, Rwanda (and not in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia); the tralac Annual Conference will take place in Kigail on 22-23 March. A draft prorgamme will be available soon.




NEW Trade Brief:  Uncertainty in a Time of Hope: Interpreting the 2018 World Economic Forum Meeting in Davos

By David Christianson, Political Analyst: The themes chosen for the World Economic Forum’s annual meeting at Davos-Klosters, Switzerland are sometimes rather different to the topics the world’s political and economic leaders want to talk about. 2018 was one of those years. The official theme ‘Creating a Shared Future in a Fractured World’ speaks to a somewhat apprehensive and negative view of the present. But, with some notable exceptions, the politicians and CEOs gathered in the Swiss Resort chose to express their optimism about global growth and their plans for encouraging more of it. As always, at Davos, the real theme emerged, or was at least uncovered, through the process of the event. Against this benchmark, the South African delegation under newly elected ANC President Cyril Ramaphosa was right on message. Read more and download the trade brief on tralac’s website...


Trade data updates

tralac has prepared a series of Trade Data Updates providing a snapshot of South Africa and Africa’s trading relationships with selected African and global trading partners. The aim is to provide an overview of the trade relationship and the major products or sectors being traded. The most recent data analysed for South Africa covers a 10-year period from 2007-2016. Visit the Trade Data Analysis page to find out more and view a selection of tralac Infographics here.

Resources portal

tralac maintains a collection of regional and national trade-related resources including copies of the texts and annexes of regional and bilateral trade agreements; copies of various regional protocols, memoranda of understanding and tariff offers; and copies of national legislation and policy documents for the 55 African Union member states.

Resources can be found in the following regional repositories and via the resources portal:

Can’t find what you’re looking for? Please let us know.
 

tralac user registration

In an effort to improve the monitoring and reporting of tralac’s website traffic, users are now required to register in order to access all tralac Publications and Resource documents. Membership (registration) is free of charge and provides you with full access to all our research material, books, and regional and national resource databases. Your secured profile information provides us with crucial analytical data which will allow us to identify topics of most interest and areas where more attention is warranted, ultimately enhancing the impact of our work.

Should you experience any difficulties with the registration process, please contact info@tralac.org.


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Information on tariff applications, Government Gazette Notices and ITAC Reports

Information on tariff applications, Government Gazette Notices, and ITAC Reports is available following this link --> http://www.itac.org.za/

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Events and Training

 
Highlights

Cumulation provisions in the SADC EPA: Report from BUSA Workshop, 22 January 2018

by Eckart Naumann, tralac Associate

Earlier this week, visiting officials from the European Commission provided insight at a Business Unity South Africa (BUSA) workshop into the cumulation provisions contained in the SADC-EU Economic Partnership Agreement (EPA). These provisions form part of the Protocol on Rules of Origin and expand on those under the previous trade regime between South Africa and the EU (TDCA), and the Cotonou Agreement for ACP countries.

Cumulation is a principle that allows, within a set of conditions and limitations, materials originating elsewhere to be counted as local materials for purposes of meeting the relevant local content and local processing requirements as specified by the respective Rules of Origin (RoO). Simply put, it permits imported materials to be classified as local content provided these are further processed locally, allowing the final product to be exported under preference to its final destination. This is not to be confused with imported materials that become substantially transformed locally in order to meet, in their own right, all relevant local content requirements as stipulated by the RoO.

Cumulation is a potentially valuable provision for producers and traders in that it can provide much greater flexibility to the relevant local content and processing obligations; it does so by significantly expanding the international scope of input-material sourcing available to producers (making goods for export under preference). Cumulation reduces the restrictiveness of RoO across the board without undermining the integrity of a particular RoO regime. It is also a convenient provision that allows trade negotiators, for example, to reduce the effective restrictiveness of RoO without necessarily having to open line-by-line negotiations.

Under the TDCA, the cumulation facility was available on a bilateral basis between South Africa and the EU and vice versa, as well as on a diagonal basis between South Africa and the ACP States, where South Africa could further process originating goods and materials obtained in the ACP without fully meeting the RoO itself.

The SADC-EU EPA goes significantly further than this. While retaining the basic bilateral cumulation, the agreement amends the diagonal cumulation facility with the ACP and introduces what is often referred to as an extended cumulation facility.

Read the full Discussion on tralac’s website...

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Publications


Trade Brief:  When African Trade Arrangements incorporate WTO Disciplines without all Member States being WTO Members

By Gerhard Erasmus, tralac Associate: The legal instruments underpinning African trade arrangements often incorporate or refer to WTO (and other multilateral) disciplines as part of the obligations undertaken by their Member States. However, in some instances, not all the members have joined the WTO. This Trade Brief takes a look at the effect of WTO rules on non-WTO members of African trade arrangements, a feature of African RECs which has given rise to little discussion or concern to date. This may, however, change rather soon, given developments towards the conclusion of the Tripartite Free Trade Area and Continental FTA. Read more and download the trade brief on tralac’s website...

Working Paper:  Structural Shifts in the Post-Apartheid SA Economy: A Comparative SAM Analysis

By John Stuart, tralac Associate: This paper makes use of a comparative SAM analysis to examine  structural shifts in the real economy of South Africa spanning the period from the mid ’90s to the end of the 2000s. These shifts include the decline of the secondary sector and the rise of the tertiary sector; higher skill labour groups have benefitted whereas lower skilled groups have lost out; leakages have increased through imports, capital outflows and unproductive taxes; the traded sector has seen increasing import penetration and declining export intensity; the economy has become less dynamic; and expenditure multipliers have fallen in net terms. These shifts necessitate a re-evaluation of the effectiveness of trade and industrial policy in South Africa. Read more and download the working paper on tralac’s website...

Trade Brief:  A nervous WTO Ministerial in Buenos Aires

By Gerhard Erasmus, tralac Associate: The World Trade Organisation’s 11th Ministerial Conference, which was held in Buenos Aires, Argentina from 10-13 December 2017, took place amid many concerns over the global trading system, including how to deal with past divides and how to tackle new challenges. MC11 could not agree on new substantive issues, particularly in Agriculture, although Ministers gave their commitment to continue negotiations related to all remaining issues. This Trade Brief takes a look at the outcomes from Buenos Aires and why meaningful breakthroughs did not happen. Read more and download the trade brief on tralac’s website...

Working Paper:  Women in Services Trade: Participation and Ownership, A Sub-Saharan African Focus

By Gavin van der Nest, tralac Associate: Gender inequalities which manifest themselves in economic transactions, relations, and institutions have an adverse impact on women’s participation in services and restricts the competitiveness of the sector. It also limits the ability of women to benefit from opportunities created by services trade and services sector growth. This paper provides an overview of the participation of women in services in sub-Saharan Africa, highlighting common constraints that women face in services trade as well as ascertaining the importance of economic, educational, health and survival, and political empowerment in the realisation of female participation in ownership, management and full-time employment. Read more and download the working paper on tralac’s website...

Trade Brief:  The First Phase of Brexit has been agreed: What is it about?

By Gerhard Erasmus, tralac Associate: On Friday 8 December, high-level negotiators from the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland (UK) and the European Union (EU) reached a last-minute agreement to keep the Brexit negotiations on track. The EU has, from the beginning, insisted that negotiations about future UK-EU trade could only start once an agreement about the Irish border, the payment of the UK’s divorce bill, and the position of EU citizens in the UK has been reached. This has now happened. This Trade Brief discusses the content of the Joint Report on Progress during Phase 1 of the Negotiations and speculates about the negotiations which lie ahead. Read more and download the trade brief on tralac’s website...

Working Paper:  Agricultural production and trade: the four corners of Africa

By Ron Sandrey, tralac Associate: Africa is a vast and diverse continent, but one that is strongly based upon its agricultural foundations. This working paper examines the profiles and performance of African agricultural production since 1961 and export trade since 2001. To assist with this analysis, Africa is divided into four ‘corners’ or regions: the South, East, North, and West.For both production and exports, this paper finds that Africa is a diverse continent, and regionally there are some major differences in each of the ‘corners’. Read more and download the working paper on tralac’s website...

Working Paper:  African trade liberalisation: implications for the clothing sector

By Ron Sandrey, tralac Associate: This working paper examines intra-African clothing trade and the barriers restricting trade in the sector, and assesses the possible implications of continental-wide liberalisation. For the key intra-African clothing exporters (South Africa, Swaziland, Mauritius, Tanzania and Kenya), tariff barriers are significant outside their own regional economic communities (RECs). This, coupled with the low intra-African shares in both imports and exports, suggests that African liberalisation would benefit trade in the sector. Read more and download the working paper on tralac’s website...

Working Paper:  African production and trade of coffee and tea in perspective: What are the implications for continental trade liberalisation?

By Ron Sandrey, tralac Associate: This working paper examines the African production and trade profiles for coffee and tea, both important exports from Africa, and the extent to which trade liberalisation across Africa may benefit trade in the sector. Ethiopia is the leading African producer of coffee, followed by Uganda, Côte d’Ivoire, Madagascar, Tanzania and Kenya. Global tea production is dominated by China and India, but Kenya has moved into third place with a global share of around 8%. Other than Egypt, North Africa imports limited values from Africa, and this points to post-liberalisation trade opportunities for at least Kenya as some tariffs there are high. Read more and download the working paper on tralac’s website...

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News




tralac’s Daily News Selection – an online African trade and regional integration news and publications digest – is compiled with the assistance of Mr. Richard Humphries (@richardhumphri1) and disseminated to enhance trade policy knowledge and debate. To receive the tralac Daily News Selection notification via email, please subscribe here.
news
Kenyan government to zero rate taxes on imported raw materials

The government plans to zero rate both the Import Declaration Tax and the Railway Development Levy on all imported raw materials to be used in manufacturing processes locally. The revenue shortfall will then be recovered by increasing tax on imported finished products.

Manufacturers cite priority areas to spark industrial growth in 2018

Kenya Association of Manufacturers (KAM) has launched the Manufacturing Priority Agenda (MPA) 2018 under the theme Sparking Kenya’s Industrial Transformation for Job Creation. The agenda highlights the need to create a sector that has a multiplier effect in the economy resulting in job and wealth creation.

CFTA set to unleash Africa’s full potential, says ECA’s Songwe

Africa’s signature policy reform of 2018, the Continental Free Trade Area (CFTA), is set to unleash the continent’s full potential with more African countries trading with each other in a wider integrated market, says Economic Commission for Africa’s (ECA) Executive Secretary, Vera Songwe.

New research papers from UNCTAD:
Single unified market: FG assures on the economy

The Federal Government has said that the proposed launching of African single trade market would not affect Nigerian economy as adequate measures were being put in place to protect the economy.

Nigeria has made it more difficult for foreigners to work in the country

Foreigners looking to work in Nigeria, Africa’s biggest economy, might be out of luck. An executive order signed by Nigeria’s President Buhari on Monday, 5 February 2018, “prohibits the ministry of interior from giving visas to foreign workers whose skills are readily available in Nigeria.”

Mozambique joins the Economic Partnership Agreement between the EU and Southern African states

The Economic Partnership Agreement (EPA) between the European Union and SADC became the first regional EPA in Africa to be fully operational after its implementation by Mozambique. Mozambique was the last piece of the SADC-EPA jigsaw to fall into place. The other five countries – Botswana, Lesotho, Namibia, South-Africa, and Swaziland – have been implementing the agreement since October 2016.

Why flying within East Africa is cumbersome

If you are a frequent flyer in East Africa, connecting from one flight to another, which is time-consuming and tiresome, plus the eventual cost of travel are likely to be your top concerns, making this travel option unattractive.

Botswana Budget Speech: Matambo pegs 2018/19 hopes on global recovery

Botswana Finance Minister Kenneth Matambo expects the warming global economy and rising commodity prices to underpin the country’s buoyant forecasts for revenues and growth in 2018/19.

Promises to world’s poorest need to be kept to stop massive inequalities, new trends show

Economic development in the world’s most-disadvantaged countries – mostly in sub-Saharan Africa – is stalling against the background of a lukewarm global recovery, risking widening inequality, new analysis from UNCTAD reveals.

Africa’s currency manipulators haven’t finished reforms yet

Angola and Morocco last month became the latest African nations to loosen long-held currency pegs, following the lead of Nigeria and Egypt as they sought to revive struggling economies. The question is whether they’ve done enough.

Uganda overtakes South Africa in Kenya exports

Uganda overtook South Africa for the first time in November as the largest source of goods ordered by Kenyans, underlining the impact of drought which saw electricity and food imports shoot up.

How tax evaders smuggle goods into the country

Rwanda Revenue Authority (RRA) recently announced that they were battling rising cases of smuggling among other malpractices with used clothes and alcoholic products being among the most smuggled goods.

Informal WTO Ministerial gathering on the sidelines of the WEF emphasises the need for political discussion on development

The Informal World Trade Organisation (WTO) Ministerial Gathering on the side-lines of World Economic Forum (WEF) was convened by Switzerland on 26 January 2018 as an opportunity for an open and frank exchange among invited Ministers on the WTO.

Ghana seeks national dialogue over cocoa pricing quandary

There is the gradual convergence of opinions on the need for a national dialogue over the producer price of cocoa Ghana pays its farmers in the face of dipping global prices.
AGOA.info


Hearing on US trade and investment with sub-Saharan Africa: Recent developments
On 23 January, the United States International Trade Commission held public hearings on US trade and investment with sub-Saharan Africa. This follows the earlier announcement in November 2017. The publicly available submissions can be downloaded here. The remaining calendar items for this process are as follows:
 
February 6, 2018: Deadline for filing all other written submissions. (Note: these written submissions can be downloaded from AGOA.info here)
April 30, 2018: Transmittal of Commission report to USTR.

Botswana launches national AGOA utilisation strategy, Kenya busy developing a follow-up AGOA strategy
Botswana recently launched a national AGOA utilization strategy. Zambia, Kenya and Lesotho are some of the countries currently developing or updating their AGOA strategies. At least a dozen of such strategies have already been launched – they can be downloaded at this link.
 
AGOA country eligibility reviewSwaziland and the Gambia re-admitted
The AGOA Implementation Subcommittee of the Trade Policy Staff Committee (Subcommittee) has been developing recommendations for the US President on AGOA country eligibility for calendar year 2018. Copies of the written submission, as well as a transcript of the oral testimony, can be downloaded from AGOA.info at this link. On 23 December 2017, through Proclamation 9223, US President Trump determined that The Gambia and Swaziland should have their AGOA preferential status restored. See the official proclamation and related news here.

New trade data to November 2017 published on AGOA.info, December / full year 2017 data currently being processed and loaded to AGOA.info
Monthly AGOA trade data to November 2017 has been updated, data to the end of 2017 is currently being processed and updated. Aggregate US exports from AGOA beneficiaries to the US were worth $24.95 billion for the full year 2017, of which $13.8 billion was shipped shipped under AGOA/GSP preference. Also see the new sector trade data for the agriculture, automotive, textiles, leather and metals sectors – with additional sector-focused data to follow.

Selected charts from the AGOA Data Center



AGOA Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
Visit a list of ‘FAQs’ relating to AGOA here.

AGOA web resources
Follow the link to a new web-resources section on the AGOA.info, housed under the Exporter Toolkit section. It contains a growing collection of online resources and contact details which provide valuable information to producers and exporters.  

AGOA Country Profiles
Bilateral trade data profiles, disaggregated by sector, are available for each AGOA beneficiary country individually and contain quarterly data. The data also includes a number of regional trade profiles, featuring the AGOA beneficiaries in SACU, SADC, EAC, COMESA and others. The monthly data sections are currently being updated to November 2017. Data includes exports by country, by product sector, and by program.

AGOA strategies
In line with the AGOA legislation, a number of countries have developed AGOA strategies to help them better utilize the preferences offered by AGOA. See the AGOA.info toolkit for the completed strategy documents. New AGOA strategies for Rwanda, Lesotho, Tanzania and Zambia were recently added. Botswana has announced the pending launch of its strategy – see related article.

Exporter Toolkit
The exporter toolkit contains sector-specific resources, and also covers key themes (SPS measures, packaging, trade shows, business planning etc.) that are of relevance to producers and traders planning to export to the US. Also see the new Web Resources section.

AGOA products database
Following revisions to the HS and a number of new product classifications, as well as certain changes to the AGOA categories, a new, updated product list covering AGOA-eligible products is available on AGOA.info. More than 6,400 tariff lines currently have AGOA status, including textiles and apparel upon meeting AGOA’s wearing apparel provisions.
 
From the AGOA news archive
AGOA.info on twitter
Follow AGOA.info on twitter: twitter.com/AGOAinfo
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