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Economic Partnership Agreements: A Challenge for Trade Justice

dc.contributor.authorSitali, Muyatwa
dc.date.accessioned2020-09-29T08:02:47Z
dc.date.available2020-09-29T08:02:47Z
dc.date.issued2007
dc.identifier.citationSitali, M. (2007). ECONOMIC PARTNERSHIP AGREEMENTS: A CHALLENGE FOR TRADE JUSTICEen
dc.identifier.urihttps://repository.jctr.org.zm/handle/20.500.14274/100
dc.descriptionZambia has been negotiating EPAs under the ESA group though it belongs to both SADC and COMESA . COMESA is the Secretariat of the Eastern Southern Africa group of countries all of which are members of COMESA regional groupings. It is worth noting that each of the negotiating regional blocks has taken different approaches to the negotiations. For the ESA group, it has been a central focus that the EPA includes development objectives and strategies in all negotiating components of the EPA. These development needs, objectives, and strategies have been articulated in what is known as the “draft EPA text” and its accompanying regional development matrix (list of developmental projects submitted by ESA Member states). COMESA Is the Secretariat of the Eastern Southern Africa group of countries all of which are members of COMESA. A mutual exchange of privileges or favours. In reciprocal trade agreements, one nation extends certain benefits to another (such as the lowering of tariff duties) and In turn receives the same or similar benefits. The EPAs are being negotiated on the primary basis that the trade preferences going to developing countries under the Lome agreement violate key WTO principles and also that ACP countries have become poorer despite preferential (favoured) access to EU markets. The EPAs are essentially a move from the use of the principle of preferences to promote trade to reciprocity . The WTO, the EU and the World Bank consider free trade is an ideal way for ACP countries to make social and economic progress. However, Zambia’s experience with liberalisation under the Structural Adjustment Programme refutes this notion. A lot of industries such as Nitrogen Chemicals of Zambia and several textile industries were liquidated which laid off a lot of people from employment.en
dc.description.abstractIn the last three years, the Debt and Trade Project (now Debt Aid and Trade Programme, DAT) of the Jesuit Centre for Theological Reflection (JCTR) invested in understanding the trade challenges faced by Zambia and other Least Developed Countries (LDC). This has been with the view to developing capacity for effective advocacy on trade arrangements that would contribute to the development of Zambia, especially human development. It is recognised that trade, if rightly done, can contribute to poverty eradication. In Zambia, poverty levels are well beyond 50 percent, averaging 34 per cent in urban areas and even higher, 80 per cent in rural areas. It is in rural areas where the big policy question of how the largest population that is agriculture-based can benefit from trade arrangements.en
dc.language.isoenen
dc.publisherJesuit Centre for Theological Reflectionen
dc.rightsAttribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 United States*
dc.rights.urihttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/us/*
dc.subjectTrade Justiceen
dc.subjectEconomic Partnershipsen
dc.titleEconomic Partnership Agreements: A Challenge for Trade Justiceen
dc.title.alternativeJCTR Policy Brief: Third and Fourth Quarters 2007en
dc.typeBriefingen


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