
The Minister of Finance, Kemi
Adeosun, on Wednesday said the Federal Government would thoroughly examine the
African Continental Free Trade Agreement before signing it.
Adeosun said this at the 2018
Annual Meetings of the Afreximbank with the theme: “Powering Africa Through
Regional Integration,” in Abuja.
She said the trade agreement was
too important for the country to sign without making sure that the interest of
its people was protected.
She said the government had
embarked on a nationwide consultations with state governments, local government
authorities, manufacturers and other stakeholders.
The minister revealed that the
government had almost concluded the consultations and would soon take a
decision on wether to sign the agreement or not.
She said: “We have been doing a
lot of consultations around the country with manufacturers and other
stakeholders.
“People are asking legitimate
questions about how the AfCFTA affects them.
“We must get things right and that
is why we must follow due process so that we can say that we have done all the
things that we are expected to do.
“So that is simply what has been
happening in the last few months.”
Meanwhile, the President of South
Africa, Cyril Ramphosa, said apart from improving intra-African trade, the
AfCFTA would also improve its banking sector.
He said also the AfCFTA also
offered great opportunities for other financiers and attract foreign direct
Investment to the continent.
Ramphosa said: “With the signing
of the AfCFTA, African banks will also be seeing great opportunities for
infrastructure development.
“They will be seeing that African
countries are now serious about developing trade and that itself will present
opportunities for them.
“I know for a fact that the EU
Development Bank have already highlighted the importance of the AfCFTA in
relations to the development and the financing of infrastructure programmes.
“This is because they have already
seen great business opportunities for a number of entrepreneurs as well as
countries.”
Ramphosa also spoke about the need
for collaboration between the private and public sectors to bridge the huge
infrastructure deficit on the continent.
The AfCFTA is expected to cover
1.2 billon Africans with Gross Domestic Product of 2.5 trillion dollars, and in
2050 it would cover four billion Africans, constituting 36 per cent of the
global population.
The agreement is expected to
increase intra-African trade from the current 16 per cent to 53 per cent with a
corresponding GDP growth and increase employment and job creation on the
continent.
49 African countries have signed
the agreement, leaving Nigeria and others.




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