Kusainiwa mkataba wa EPA, kuwabeza wawekezaji wa ndani

Kusainiwa mkataba wa EPA, kuwabeza wawekezaji wa ndani

Mwande na Mndewa

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KUSAINIWA MKATABA WA EPA,KUWABEZA WAWEKEZAJI WA NDANI.

Nimeona ACT wakitoa hofu yao kama ile ya Hayati Mkapa ya kuhofia bidhaa nyingi nchini hivyo kutowalinda wawekezaji wa ndani.

1. Tujiulize faida za kuruhusu bidhaa za nje kuingia nchini yaani import goods nyingi nazo ni zipi?

2. Kwanini bidhaa za ndani zinakuwa bei juu,je ni kwa sababu ya gharama zetu za uendeshaji kwa muwekezaji wa ndani?

3. Shabaha ya Hayati Magufuli ilikuwa kuwekeza kwenye Umeme na reli ya Umeme ili kupunguza gharama za muwekezaji wa ndani pale gharama za Umeme zitakaposhuka na usafiri wa reli ya Umeme utakapo rahisisha uharaka wa usafirishaji,Shabaha hii iko wapi kama Mkataba wa EPA utasainiwa!?

4. Je kwa asilimia kubwa nini target market ya muwekezaji wa ndani,je kuuza ndani (local ) au kuuza nje? (exportation).

5. Mwisho ni kweli EPA italeta tu bidhaa nyingi au pia kuwaleta wawekezaji ili kuzalishia hapa nchini!?

Kama tunazalisha machungwa mengi matombo na muheza kuepuka gharama za usafirishaji,vianzishwe viwanda uko uko kutokana na mazingira kuanzisha manufacture hapo ni bora ufanye hivyo. .

Wakati tunaifikilia EPA, tujiulize, sisi kama Nchi tuna bidhaa kiasi gani tunasafirisha nje ? Je ni uwiano sawa na zinazoingia? Kama bidhaa zetu ni kiasi kidogo, basi tufikirie kwenye kuongeza uwekezaji kwenye bidhaa za ndani kwanza ndio tuende huko . Achana na watu wanaofikiria kila siku kupata maslahi toka nje ya Nchi.

Ebu fikiria Tanzania inasafirisha maua, mboga mboga eti hawatakatwa tax,nao wanaleta magari na vipuri vya magari hakuna kuwatoza tax,hii akili za kimangungo wa msovelo Yani mtu analeta machines hatozwi tax?

NB:- tukiweza kujibu maswali kwa kuyatatua kinachosababisha hivyo basi tutaweza kuamua sasa je twende na EPA au laah.
 
Viwanda vya ndani vinaweza lupitia wakati mgumu sana ila yawapasa kujifunza kwanini sukari miaka na miaka ni jambo la kupigia kelele? Mafuta ya kula vilevile
 
Huwa mnawanang'a wamasai wa Ngorongoro kuwa wanamiliki ng'ombe wengi lakini hawana tija kwani ni maisha yao ni maskini.

Binafsi sioni tofauti ya kujivunia viwanda vya ndani wakati viwanda hivyo hudhalisha bidhaa hafifu na kuuza bei juu.
Wacha EPA (Economic Partnership Agreement) isainiwe ili bidhaa zenye uhakika ziingie kwa bei nafuu ili sisi Walaji tuweze badili maisha.
Cement, nondo, vifaa vya umeme, vipuri vya magari nk itakuwa vingi tena kwa bei nafuu na wananchi tutanufaika.

Hivyo viwanda tunavyoviofia Kufa serikali ivitolee kodi ili iwasaidie katika gharama za uzalishaji.

Mama saini EPA ili wananchi tulio wengi tunufaike
 
Kodi utitili hivyo viwanda vya kuhesabu vitaponaje?
 
Miaka nenda Rudi, viwanda haviboreshi ubora wa bidhaa, bidhaa hafifu, bei juu, wacha tunywe hadi Coca cola ya kutokea Rwanda. Wananchi tunastahili kupewa bidhaa Bora, hawa wenye viwanda hata wakipewa unafuu bado hawashushi bei, serikali ilishashusha au kuondoa Kodi kwenye pedi, watu wakabakiza bei zile zile
 
Mpk 2030 ni muda mfupi? Na baada ya hapo atamrithisha kiti mtu amtakaye yeye ambaye naye atavuta mpk 2040.
Mmesahau kuna Mungu? Muulizeni Magufuri mkibahatika kukutana naye.
 
KUSAINIWA MKATABA WA EPA,KUWABEZA WAWEKEZAJI WA NDANI.

Nimeona ACT wakitoa hofu yao kama ile ya Hayati Mkapa ya kuhofia bidhaa nyingi nchini hivyo kutowalinda wawekezaji wa ndani.

1. Tujiulize faida za kuruhusu bidhaa za nje kuingia nchini yaani import goods nyingi nazo ni zipi?

2. Kwanini bidhaa za ndani zinakuwa bei juu,je ni kwa sababu ya gharama zetu za uendeshaji kwa muwekezaji wa ndani?

3. Shabaha ya Hayati Magufuli ilikuwa kuwekeza kwenye Umeme na reli ya Umeme ili kupunguza gharama za muwekezaji wa ndani pale gharama za Umeme zitakaposhuka na usafiri wa reli ya Umeme utakapo rahisisha uharaka wa usafirishaji,Shabaha hii iko wapi kama Mkataba wa EPA utasainiwa!?

4. Je kwa asilimia kubwa nini target market ya muwekezaji wa ndani,je kuuza ndani (local ) au kuuza nje? (exportation).

5. Mwisho ni kweli EPA italeta tu bidhaa nyingi au pia kuwaleta wawekezaji ili kuzalishia hapa nchini!?

Kama tunazalisha machungwa mengi matombo na muheza kuepuka gharama za usafirishaji,vianzishwe viwanda uko uko kutokana na mazingira kuanzisha manufacture hapo ni bora ufanye hivyo. .

Wakati tunaifikilia EPA, tujiulize, sisi kama Nchi tuna bidhaa kiasi gani tunasafirisha nje ? Je ni uwiano sawa na zinazoingia? Kama bidhaa zetu ni kiasi kidogo, basi tufikirie kwenye kuongeza uwekezaji kwenye bidhaa za ndani kwanza ndio tuende huko . Achana na watu wanaofikiria kila siku kupata maslahi toka nje ya Nchi.

Ebu fikiria Tanzania inasafirisha maua, mboga mboga eti hawatakatwa tax,nao wanaleta magari na vipuri vya magari hakuna kuwatoza tax,hii akili za kimangungo wa msovelo Yani mtu analeta machines hatozwi tax?

NB:- tukiweza kujibu maswali kwa kuyatatua kinachosababisha hivyo basi tutaweza kuamua sasa je twende na EPA au laah.
Upuuzi huu viwanda vya ndani au marabish toka China??? Unanunuwa vitu kesho vimeharibika Guarantee hamna,au wewe unalenga Juice tuu???
 
Binafsi nasema ni heri huo mkataba usainiwe bidhaa nyingi kutoka nje zije ndani
Hii itakuwa pigo kwa Wahindi, Waarabu na Wahindi Uchwara wamiliki wa viwanda vya ndani na neema kwa wananchi(consumer).
 
Viwanda vya ndani vinaweza lupitia wakati mgumu sana ila yawapasa kujifunza kwanini sukari miaka na miaka ni jambo la kupigia kelele? Mafuta ya kula vilevile
Magari ,vipuri nk vitashuka bei tutaanza kupata bidhaa bora toka nje kwa bei kidogo poa

Kama viwanda havijafa kwa mchina kuingiza bidhaa zake za kila namna hizo nchi zingine hazina uwezo wa kuua viwanda vyetu kwa bidhaa zao kwanza nyingi watakazoleta sisi hatuzalishi
 

WHY THE EPA IS NOT BENEFICIAL TO TANZANIA -​

By Benjamin William Mkapa



This article was published in The Daily News of Tanzania on 28 July 2016. In the article, the former Tanzanian President presents his views on why the Economic Partnership Agreement (which the European Union has been negotiating with African countries on a sub-regional basis) would be inappropriate for Tanzania.

1200px-Benjamin_William_Mkapa_-_World_Economic_Forum_on_Africa_2010_-_2.jpg

By Benjamin William Mkapa

The EPA issue has once again re-emerged when Tanzania informed EAC Members and the EU that it would not be able to sign the Economic Partnership Agreement (EPA) between EU and the six EAC Member States in early July.

The European Commission reportedly proposed signature of the EAC EPA in Nairobi, on the sidelines of the 14th session of the UN Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD XIV).

This is a major quadrennial event where all UN Member States negotiate guidance for UNCTAD, a UN institution working on trade and development. For the European Commission, it would have been a propitious place for a signature ceremony in order to project the EPA as a ‘trade and development’ agreement to the benefit of EAC. Yet, the agreement is antithetical to Tanzania’s as well as the region’s trade and development prospects.

The EPA for Tanzania and the EAC never made much sense. The maths just never added up.
The costs for the country and the EAC region would have been higher than the benefits. As a Least Developed Country (LDC), Tanzania already enjoys the Everything but Arms (EBA) preference scheme provided by the European Union i.e. we can already export duty-free and quota-free to the EU market without providing the EU with similar market access terms.

If we sign the EPA, we would still get the same duty-free access, but in return, we would have to open up our markets also for EU exports.

Tanzania would reduce to zero tariffs on 90% of all its industrial goods trade with the EU i.e. duty-free access on almost all the EU’s non-agricultural products into the country.
Such a high level of liberalisation vis-à-vis a very competitive partner is likely to put our existing local industries in jeopardy and discourage the development of new industries. Research using trade data shows that Tanzania currently produces and exports on 983 tariff lines (at the HS 6 digit level). The EU produces and exports on over 5,000 tariff lines.

When the EPA is implemented, 335 of the 983 products we currently produce would be protected in the EPA’s ‘sensitive list’, but 648 tariff lines would be made duty-free; i.e. the existing industries on these 648 tariff lines would have to compete with the EU’s imports without the protection of tariffs. Will these sectors survive the competition?

These 648 tariff lines – the domestic sectors or industries, which are likely to be put at risk include agricultural products (e.g. maize products, cotton seed oil cake); chemical products (e.g. urea, fertilisers); vehicle industry parts (tires); medicaments; intermediate industrial products (e.g. plastic packing material, steel, iron and aluminium articles, wires and cables); parts of machines and final industrial products (e.g. weighing machines, metal rolling mills, drilling machines, transformers, generating sets, prefabricated buildings etc); parts of machines (parts of gas turbines, parts of cranes, work trucks, shovels, and other construction machinery, parts of machines for industrial preparation/ manufacturing of food, aircraft parts etc).

The list does not stop here. Liberalisation (zero tariffs) also applies to the many industrial sectors that Tanzania and the EAC do not yet have existing production/exports – about 3,102 tariff lines for Tanzania.

Threatening Regional Industrialisation and Trade
Statistics show that in fact, for the EAC region, the African market is the primary market for its manufactured exports. In contrast, 91% of its current trade with the EU is made up of primary commodity exports (agricultural products such as coffee, tea, spices, fruit and vegetables, fish, tobacco, hides and skins etc).

Only a minuscule 6% or about $200,000 of EAC exports to the EU is composed of manufactured goods. In contrast, of the total EAC exports to Africa, almost 50% is made up of manufactured exports – about $2.5 billion – according to 2013 – 2015 data. Of this, $1.5 billion are EAC country exports to other EAC countries.

These figures tell two stories: One; the importance of the African market for EAC’s aspirations to industrialise. In contrast, the EU market plays almost no role in this.Two; the EAC internal market makes up 60% of EAC’s manufactured exports to Africa, i.e., the EAC regional market is extremely valuable in supporting EAC’s industrialisation efforts.

The EPA would threaten this regional industrialisation opportunity that is currently blossoming since most EU manufactured products would enter the EAC market dutyfree. Just as our manufactured products are not competitive in the EU market, even though they can be exported duty-free, might it not be the case that when EU manufactured products can come duty-free into the EAC market, EAC manufactured products may also not sell? The EPA could in fact destroy our economic regional integration efforts.

The pains EAC has taken to build a regional market may instead help serve EU’s commercial interests by offering the EU one EAC market, rather than ensuring that that market can be accessed by our own producers.

Removing an Important Industrialisation Tool – No New Export Taxes
The other area where the EPA hits the heart of our industrialisation aspirations are its disciplines on export taxes. At the WTO, export taxes are completely legal.The logic of export taxes is to encourage producers to enter into value-added processing, hence encouraging diversification and the upgradation of production capacities. Developed countries themselves had used these policy tools when they were developing.

The EU has a raw materials initiative aimed at accessing non-agricultural raw materials found in other countries. According to the European Commission, ‘securing reliable and unhindered access to raw materials is important for the EU. In the EU, there are at least 30 million jobs depending on the availability of raw materials.’ In implementing this initiative, the EU has used trade agreements to discipline export taxes.

The EPA prohibits signatories from introducing new export taxes or increase existing ones. For Tanzania and the EAC region with its rich deposits of raw material, including tungsten, cobalt, tantalum etc; such disciplines in the long-run would be incongruent with our objective to industrialise and add value to our resources.

Losing Important Tariff Revenue – Shrinking the Government Coffer
The other area of loss resulting from the EPA is tariff revenue, and the numbers are not small. Conservative estimates (assuming import growth of 0.9% year on year) show that for the EAC as a whole tariff revenue losses would amount to $251 million a year by the end of the EPA’s implementation period. Cumulative tariff revenue losses would amount to USD 2.9 billion in the first 25 years of the EPA’s life.

For Tanzania, the losses based on 2013–2014 import figures are about $71 million a year by year 25. Cumulatively, just for Tanzania, they come up to $700 million over the first 25 years.

Where is the Promised Development Aid?
EU has made many promises that the EPA would be accompanied by development assistance. Hence the EAC EPA incorporates a ‘Development Matrix’ containing a list of economic development projects for the EAC. The price tag of implementing this Development Matrix is $70 billion.

The Matrix and assistance is to be reviewed every 5 years. For the time-being, the EU has pledged to contribute a paltry $3.49 million, which translates into 0.005% of the total required funds! This is also a far cry from the tariff revenue losses the region faces – the $251 million a year mentioned above.

EPA to Safeguard Kenya’s Flower Industry – A Fair Exchange?
The only area where the EPA is supposed to serve the interest of the EAC is by providing duty-free access to Kenya. As a non-LDC, Kenya does not have duty-free access via the EU’s EBA. Kenya’s main export item to the EU is flowers – just over $500,000 a year.

Without the EPA, Kenyan’s flowers would be charged a 10% customs duty. There are other Kenyan exports also – vegetables, fruit, fish – that will face tariffs. However, the flower industry has thus far been the most vocal. Nevertheless, all in all, Kenyan exports to the EU market (including the UK) amounts to about $1.5 billion.

If no EPA is signed, the extra duties charged to Kenyan exports amount to about $100 million a year. Is this worth signing an EPA for? — The avoidance of duties of $100 million? The tariff revenue losses as the EPA is implemented (and more tariff lines are liberalised) would be comparable.
This does not even include the tariff revenue losses of the other EAC LDCs, nor the challenges posed to domestic/ regional industries. In addition, the Brexit development is further reason for the region to pause and reconsider.

The UK is a major export market for Kenya, absorbing 28% of Kenya’s exports to the EU. This reduces the EPA’s supposed ‘benefits’ by a quarter for Kenya. There is a possible solution for Kenya – to apply for the EU’s Generalised System of Preferences Plus scheme (GSP+). Under this, almost all of Kenya’s current exports could enter EU duty-free including flowers and fish.

This option could be explored. Alternatively all EAC countries would do well to attempt to diversify production and exports away from primary commodities towards value-added products, and also to diversify our export destinations. Africa is a critical market for EAC’s manufactured goods. Regional integration and trade is the most promising avenue for EAC’s industrial development. The EPA would derail us from that promise.


Benjamin William Mkapa is a former President of Tanzania and the Chair of the South Centre Board.

cc:

Mwande na Mndewa Mr Q Bambushka cool d Van pebles Sexless Edward Sambai Smart911 kichomiz Bambushka Trondheim Sandali Ali YEHODAYA msonobali Kilatha
 
Neno uhalifu ni pana sana na wahusika wanatofautiana.

Mtaani ukiambiwa nyumba fulani wameamia wahalifu inabidi ujiulize ni wa aina gani ili uchukue hatua sahihi.

Mateja ambayo hayana silaha wao kazi yao kudokoa tu uongeze vitasa mlangoni na kuanza kuanika nguo ndani.

Wahuni ambao wamegeuka waporaji kujikinga inabidi ukajifunze walau tae-kwondo akija unampa vitasa vyake

Majambazi ya silaha ambapo kujikinga inabidi ujenge ukuta, uzungushie nyaya juu, uweke mlinzi getini na ikibidi uwe na mguu wako wa kuku ndani ya nyumba.

Unajipanga vipi kujilinda inatokana na risk za wahalifu wenyewe unaokabiliana nao.

Same thing kuogopa EPA kwa kuhofia uzalishaji wa ndani ni sawa na kutumia gharama zisizo za lazima kujenga ukuta, kuweka mlinzi getini, mbwa wakali na bunduki wakati unaishi nyumba ya nyasi, aina umeme, shughuli zako ni mkulima wa kujikumu, income ni kwa hand to mouth, usafiri wako baiskeli; huyo jambazi wa bunduki awezi kuwa interested na mtu kama mimi. So hizo security investments zangu sio necessary.

Ndio kama kwenye EPA inabidi tukae chini na kujiuliza nini hasa Europeans wanataka unaweza fanya risk assessments hizo kwa kuangalia what they export the most duniani (data hizo zipo) unaangalia wewe unazalisha ivyo vitu na kwa kiasi gani kuna soko kubwa la wao kuingia bila ya wazalishaji wako kuathirika.

Wana import nini, kutoka wapi, je kuna fursa ya wewe kushindana na exporters wengine, umejipanga kutumia hizo fursa.

Wanataka nini zaidi land security je offers yao inaendana na sheria zetu, kipi kiwe amended kwenda na sheria zetu and so forth, lakini kuijadili EPA kana kwamba unaongelea uhalifu kwa upana wake utashindwa kujua ni risk zipi hasa ndio zako na ujikinge nazo kabla ya kuingia makubaliano.
 
KUSAINIWA MKATABA WA EPA,KUWABEZA WAWEKEZAJI WA NDANI.

Nimeona ACT wakitoa hofu yao kama ile ya Hayati Mkapa ya kuhofia bidhaa nyingi nchini hivyo kutowalinda wawekezaji wa ndani.

1. Tujiulize faida za kuruhusu bidhaa za nje kuingia nchini yaani import goods nyingi nazo ni zipi?

2. Kwanini bidhaa za ndani zinakuwa bei juu,je ni kwa sababu ya gharama zetu za uendeshaji kwa muwekezaji wa ndani?

3. Shabaha ya Hayati Magufuli ilikuwa kuwekeza kwenye Umeme na reli ya Umeme ili kupunguza gharama za muwekezaji wa ndani pale gharama za Umeme zitakaposhuka na usafiri wa reli ya Umeme utakapo rahisisha uharaka wa usafirishaji,Shabaha hii iko wapi kama Mkataba wa EPA utasainiwa!?

4. Je kwa asilimia kubwa nini target market ya muwekezaji wa ndani,je kuuza ndani (local ) au kuuza nje? (exportation).

5. Mwisho ni kweli EPA italeta tu bidhaa nyingi au pia kuwaleta wawekezaji ili kuzalishia hapa nchini!?

Kama tunazalisha machungwa mengi matombo na muheza kuepuka gharama za usafirishaji,vianzishwe viwanda uko uko kutokana na mazingira kuanzisha manufacture hapo ni bora ufanye hivyo. .

Wakati tunaifikilia EPA, tujiulize, sisi kama Nchi tuna bidhaa kiasi gani tunasafirisha nje ? Je ni uwiano sawa na zinazoingia? Kama bidhaa zetu ni kiasi kidogo, basi tufikirie kwenye kuongeza uwekezaji kwenye bidhaa za ndani kwanza ndio tuende huko . Achana na watu wanaofikiria kila siku kupata maslahi toka nje ya Nchi.

Ebu fikiria Tanzania inasafirisha maua, mboga mboga eti hawatakatwa tax,nao wanaleta magari na vipuri vya magari hakuna kuwatoza tax,hii akili za kimangungo wa msovelo Yani mtu analeta machines hatozwi tax?

NB:- tukiweza kujibu maswali kwa kuyatatua kinachosababisha hivyo basi tutaweza kuamua sasa je twende na EPA au laah.
Weka hapa vipengele vya EPA ndio tuwe na mjadala huru..

Ishu kubwa waliyoraise ACT ni kupoteza mapato ya serikali na hivyo kutaka maelezo ya jinsi fidia itakayopatikana.

Hata hivyo Serikali imesema inaendeyna majadiliano na EU na mwezi wa 3,watakuja hapa kuendelea na majadiliano.

Ni matumaini yetu kwamba hizo concerns zote zitakuwa dealt..

Mwisho investors wengi wanakuja kwa ajili ya exports na sio kuuza Nchini kwa sababu hatuna purchasing power.
 
Mwisho investors wengi wanakuja kwa ajili ya exports na sio kuuza Nchini kwa sababu hatuna purchasing power.
Uko Sahihi kabisa
Middle income wa Tanzania hana uwezo wa kununua gari mpya anaishia kununua mitumba ya japan na bidhaa za china tu Purchasing power ndogo sana wanakuja tu kwa ajili ya exports zaidi
 

WHY THE EPA IS NOT BENEFICIAL TO TANZANIA -​

By Benjamin William Mkapa



This article was published in The Daily News of Tanzania on 28 July 2016. In the article, the former Tanzanian President presents his views on why the Economic Partnership Agreement (which the European Union has been negotiating with African countries on a sub-regional basis) would be inappropriate for Tanzania.

1200px-Benjamin_William_Mkapa_-_World_Economic_Forum_on_Africa_2010_-_2.jpg

By Benjamin William Mkapa

The EPA issue has once again re-emerged when Tanzania informed EAC Members and the EU that it would not be able to sign the Economic Partnership Agreement (EPA) between EU and the six EAC Member States in early July.

The European Commission reportedly proposed signature of the EAC EPA in Nairobi, on the sidelines of the 14th session of the UN Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD XIV).

This is a major quadrennial event where all UN Member States negotiate guidance for UNCTAD, a UN institution working on trade and development. For the European Commission, it would have been a propitious place for a signature ceremony in order to project the EPA as a ‘trade and development’ agreement to the benefit of EAC. Yet, the agreement is antithetical to Tanzania’s as well as the region’s trade and development prospects.

The EPA for Tanzania and the EAC never made much sense. The maths just never added up.
The costs for the country and the EAC region would have been higher than the benefits. As a Least Developed Country (LDC), Tanzania already enjoys the Everything but Arms (EBA) preference scheme provided by the European Union i.e. we can already export duty-free and quota-free to the EU market without providing the EU with similar market access terms.

If we sign the EPA, we would still get the same duty-free access, but in return, we would have to open up our markets also for EU exports.

Tanzania would reduce to zero tariffs on 90% of all its industrial goods trade with the EU i.e. duty-free access on almost all the EU’s non-agricultural products into the country.
Such a high level of liberalisation vis-à-vis a very competitive partner is likely to put our existing local industries in jeopardy and discourage the development of new industries. Research using trade data shows that Tanzania currently produces and exports on 983 tariff lines (at the HS 6 digit level). The EU produces and exports on over 5,000 tariff lines.

When the EPA is implemented, 335 of the 983 products we currently produce would be protected in the EPA’s ‘sensitive list’, but 648 tariff lines would be made duty-free; i.e. the existing industries on these 648 tariff lines would have to compete with the EU’s imports without the protection of tariffs. Will these sectors survive the competition?

These 648 tariff lines – the domestic sectors or industries, which are likely to be put at risk include agricultural products (e.g. maize products, cotton seed oil cake); chemical products (e.g. urea, fertilisers); vehicle industry parts (tires); medicaments; intermediate industrial products (e.g. plastic packing material, steel, iron and aluminium articles, wires and cables); parts of machines and final industrial products (e.g. weighing machines, metal rolling mills, drilling machines, transformers, generating sets, prefabricated buildings etc); parts of machines (parts of gas turbines, parts of cranes, work trucks, shovels, and other construction machinery, parts of machines for industrial preparation/ manufacturing of food, aircraft parts etc).

The list does not stop here. Liberalisation (zero tariffs) also applies to the many industrial sectors that Tanzania and the EAC do not yet have existing production/exports – about 3,102 tariff lines for Tanzania.

Threatening Regional Industrialisation and Trade
Statistics show that in fact, for the EAC region, the African market is the primary market for its manufactured exports. In contrast, 91% of its current trade with the EU is made up of primary commodity exports (agricultural products such as coffee, tea, spices, fruit and vegetables, fish, tobacco, hides and skins etc).

Only a minuscule 6% or about $200,000 of EAC exports to the EU is composed of manufactured goods. In contrast, of the total EAC exports to Africa, almost 50% is made up of manufactured exports – about $2.5 billion – according to 2013 – 2015 data. Of this, $1.5 billion are EAC country exports to other EAC countries.

These figures tell two stories: One; the importance of the African market for EAC’s aspirations to industrialise. In contrast, the EU market plays almost no role in this.Two; the EAC internal market makes up 60% of EAC’s manufactured exports to Africa, i.e., the EAC regional market is extremely valuable in supporting EAC’s industrialisation efforts.

The EPA would threaten this regional industrialisation opportunity that is currently blossoming since most EU manufactured products would enter the EAC market dutyfree. Just as our manufactured products are not competitive in the EU market, even though they can be exported duty-free, might it not be the case that when EU manufactured products can come duty-free into the EAC market, EAC manufactured products may also not sell? The EPA could in fact destroy our economic regional integration efforts.

The pains EAC has taken to build a regional market may instead help serve EU’s commercial interests by offering the EU one EAC market, rather than ensuring that that market can be accessed by our own producers.

Removing an Important Industrialisation Tool – No New Export Taxes
The other area where the EPA hits the heart of our industrialisation aspirations are its disciplines on export taxes. At the WTO, export taxes are completely legal.The logic of export taxes is to encourage producers to enter into value-added processing, hence encouraging diversification and the upgradation of production capacities. Developed countries themselves had used these policy tools when they were developing.

The EU has a raw materials initiative aimed at accessing non-agricultural raw materials found in other countries. According to the European Commission, ‘securing reliable and unhindered access to raw materials is important for the EU. In the EU, there are at least 30 million jobs depending on the availability of raw materials.’ In implementing this initiative, the EU has used trade agreements to discipline export taxes.

The EPA prohibits signatories from introducing new export taxes or increase existing ones. For Tanzania and the EAC region with its rich deposits of raw material, including tungsten, cobalt, tantalum etc; such disciplines in the long-run would be incongruent with our objective to industrialise and add value to our resources.

Losing Important Tariff Revenue – Shrinking the Government Coffer
The other area of loss resulting from the EPA is tariff revenue, and the numbers are not small. Conservative estimates (assuming import growth of 0.9% year on year) show that for the EAC as a whole tariff revenue losses would amount to $251 million a year by the end of the EPA’s implementation period. Cumulative tariff revenue losses would amount to USD 2.9 billion in the first 25 years of the EPA’s life.

For Tanzania, the losses based on 2013–2014 import figures are about $71 million a year by year 25. Cumulatively, just for Tanzania, they come up to $700 million over the first 25 years.

Where is the Promised Development Aid?
EU has made many promises that the EPA would be accompanied by development assistance. Hence the EAC EPA incorporates a ‘Development Matrix’ containing a list of economic development projects for the EAC. The price tag of implementing this Development Matrix is $70 billion.

The Matrix and assistance is to be reviewed every 5 years. For the time-being, the EU has pledged to contribute a paltry $3.49 million, which translates into 0.005% of the total required funds! This is also a far cry from the tariff revenue losses the region faces – the $251 million a year mentioned above.

EPA to Safeguard Kenya’s Flower Industry – A Fair Exchange?
The only area where the EPA is supposed to serve the interest of the EAC is by providing duty-free access to Kenya. As a non-LDC, Kenya does not have duty-free access via the EU’s EBA. Kenya’s main export item to the EU is flowers – just over $500,000 a year.

Without the EPA, Kenyan’s flowers would be charged a 10% customs duty. There are other Kenyan exports also – vegetables, fruit, fish – that will face tariffs. However, the flower industry has thus far been the most vocal. Nevertheless, all in all, Kenyan exports to the EU market (including the UK) amounts to about $1.5 billion.

If no EPA is signed, the extra duties charged to Kenyan exports amount to about $100 million a year. Is this worth signing an EPA for? — The avoidance of duties of $100 million? The tariff revenue losses as the EPA is implemented (and more tariff lines are liberalised) would be comparable.
This does not even include the tariff revenue losses of the other EAC LDCs, nor the challenges posed to domestic/ regional industries. In addition, the Brexit development is further reason for the region to pause and reconsider.

The UK is a major export market for Kenya, absorbing 28% of Kenya’s exports to the EU. This reduces the EPA’s supposed ‘benefits’ by a quarter for Kenya. There is a possible solution for Kenya – to apply for the EU’s Generalised System of Preferences Plus scheme (GSP+). Under this, almost all of Kenya’s current exports could enter EU duty-free including flowers and fish.

This option could be explored. Alternatively all EAC countries would do well to attempt to diversify production and exports away from primary commodities towards value-added products, and also to diversify our export destinations. Africa is a critical market for EAC’s manufactured goods. Regional integration and trade is the most promising avenue for EAC’s industrial development. The EPA would derail us from that promise.


Benjamin William Mkapa is a former President of Tanzania and the Chair of the South Centre Board.

cc:

Mwande na Mndewa Mr Q Bambushka cool d Van pebles Sexless Edward Sambai Smart911 kichomiz Bambushka Trondheim Sandali Ali YEHODAYA msonobali Kilatha
Nikitulia nitaipitia
 
Unajua hizi huwa ni bilateral agreements, tuna nafasi ya Ku negotiate,

Binafsi kama makubaliano yanakuwa ya wao kuingiza mitambo ya kujenga viwanda, mfano cotton processing, na ushonaji wa designer clothes, kwa ajili ya soko la nguo la ulaya ni sawa, ulaya nguo ikivaliwa summer 2022, haivaliwii 2023.

Au hiyo mitambo na mashine Kwa ajili ya horticulture inayopeleka maua mboga na matunda ni Sawa.

Hii mikataba huwa complex Sana. Ina marejeo mengi sana. Labda tuione tuisome tuielewe ndiyo tuijadili, hivi hivi wawezakuta tunazungumzia item ndogo sana, wakati kuna mambo yenye maslahi mapana zaidi!
 
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Ukiangalia ulindaji wetu wa viwanda vya ndani utaona hauna ukomo. Kwa mfano tumelinda sana viwanda vya ndani vya sukari nini matokeo yake? Hao wenye viwanda wamepewa mpaka jukumu la kuagizia sukari nje kufidia hilo pengo linalijitokeza. Kwa kutumia huo mwanya, wanazalisha sukari kiduuuchu na sehemukubwa inaagizwa kutoka nje na kuuzwa kwa bei kubwa huku wakulima wa miwa hawalipwi madai yao.
 
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