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What else needs be considered when negotiating an EPA

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analysed whether the trade in goods liberalisation commitments of an EPA would ... shall determine selected services they would like to liberalise vis- -vis the EU ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: What else needs be considered when negotiating an EPA


1
What else needs be considered when negotiating an
EPA?
  • CSPP Partners' Workshop
  • August 2007

2
What the workshop says so far
  • Both, an EPA and a non-EPA imply costs
  • The workshop
  • analysed whether the trade in goods
    liberalisation commitments of an EPA would be
    feasible for Uganda
  • named the potential costs of not signing an EPA,
    such as loss of aid
  • Your results suggest
  • It would be feasible for Uganda to liberalise
    substantially all trade in goods towards the EU
    and to exclude sensitive products
  • But
  • EPAs are not only about trade in goods
    liberalisation and
  • EPAs are supposed to be regional agreements

3
What else will be in an EPA?
  • The Commission would like to include services and
    trade-related issues (investment, competition,
    trade facilitation, public procurement,
    intellectual property)
  • EC major objective is to simplify and harmonise
    the rule of the game and to promote trade and
    sustainable development
  • ACP Obligations go beyond what has been agreed
    under WTO and will constrain policy space and
    countries capacities
  • Who is right?
  • We do not know this depends largely on how the
    provisions that are included into an EPA look like

4
Services
  • Commission proposes positive list i.e. ACP
    countries shall determine selected services they
    would like to liberalise vis-à-vis the EU
  • Cost/benefit analysis for Uganda goes beyond the
    workshop
  • General approach has to be in line with GATS
    (substantial)
  • GATS flexibility rules are more generous real
    asymmetry with respect to covering, deepening and
    time frame of liberalisation would be possible
  • Existing EU FTAs incorporate provisions on
    services in a very different manner, from
    economic cooperation and potential liberalisation
    (TDCA) to the liberalisation of services in
    various fields (Chile)
  • EU would like to go beyond TDCA

5
Trade-related issues
  • The Commission would like to include some
    trade-related areas.
  • How these areas will be covered is largely
    unknown.
  • The devil is in the detail
  • Some provisions are likely to go beyond pure
    declaration of intents to cooperate on
    trade-related issue in order to facilitate trade.
  • To what extent binding commitments are in
    Ugandas interests would need to be evaluated on
    a case by case basis.

6
How to box smart
  • Identify what you would like to get out of it
  • Such as technical and financial assistance to
    build-up a national competition authority, to
    facilitate border procedures, to comply with EU
    standards etc.
  • Identify what you are ready to give without
    giving too much
  • Analyse previous EU FTAs to check out what is
    possible
  • Example TDCA only shallow provisions on
    trade-related issues centred on cooperation
  • Identify your obligations under an EPA (such as
    the creation of new institutions and
    administrative authorities) and link them to the
    Development Chapter.

7
What is about the regional component?
  • The EU would like to enter into EPAs with ACP
    regional blocks
  • Problem No ESA CET will be formed until the end
    of this year
  • RI is in its infancy ESA members are very
    heterogeneous with respect to their tariff
    structures and defensive interests
  • Overlapping memberships in ESA EAC and SADC
    plus not all COMESA countries are part of the ESA
    group
  • What countries will finally enter into the ESA
    EPA?
  • Some countries might join alternative EPAs or
    even create a new EPA Eastern African Community
  • Some countries might opt for EBA / trade under
    GSP

8
What is about the regional component?
  • Special and differential treatment for LDCs will
    be very difficult
  • As landlocked country Uganda mainly imports via
    its neighbours
  • Does Uganda have the capacity to supervise
    indirect EU imports and tax them accordingly?
  • Indirect EU imports are also a problem when
    rejecting the EPA
  • Long transitional periods would offer the chance
    to harmonise tariffs regionally before opening up
    to the EU
  • BUT the ESA EPA is supposed to make a regional
    offer by the end of this year

9
How to box smart
  • Evaluate the option for a framework EPA which
    would be a basic FTA that complies with Art. XXIV
    WTO
  • What would be needed
  • ESA/EAC had to agree in principle to enter into a
    reciprocal trade relation with the EU
  • The EU would need to accept that EPAs are not
    finalised by the end of this year
  • How it could look like
  • The parties agree on the time frame of
    liberalisation
  • ESA/EAC defines the first charge of
    liberalisation (2008) all other charges (5, 10,
    15, 25 years) would be specified later
  • What is the benefit
  • The framework EPA would make EU-ACP trade
    relations WTO compatible and buy in time for
    regional harmonisation

10
What else needs be considered when negotiating an
EPA?
  • CSPP Partners' Workshop
  • August 2007
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