Continental free trade area to boost e-commerce in Africa –UNCTAD

Opportunities abound for Africa to engage in and benefit from e-commerce and the digital economy as the African Continental Free Trade Agreement (AfCFTA) comes into force, speakers said at an UNCTAD’s Africa eCommerce Week in Nairobi, Kenya.

The High-level Dialogue on Trade and the Digital Economy in Africa showed that the continent has the potential to scale e-commerce enterprises – but its new free trade area will be key in this regard.

The event addressed challenges such as the persisting infrastructure gap and the digital divide, inadequate regulatory and institutional frameworks, a weak enabling environment, and limited skills of both producers and consumers of digital products.

UNCTAD Secretary-General Mukhisa Kituyi said that global e-commerce had grown phenomenally, but even so, it remained constrained.

“It’s very clear that e-commerce and the digital economy do not happen by accident but as a result of purposeful actions,” an UNCTAD press release quoted him as saying.

Governments must create a policy framework, invest in the right skills, protect the integrity of payment systems, and construct roads and delivery networks, he said.

“Today we must build momentum and governments cannot be left behind,” Dr. Kituyi said, adding that the driving force must be “the developmental state” and an all-of-government approach to building enabling environments for digital economic activity.

“Today, broadband should be seen as a public utility,” he said.

Stephen Karingi, director of the Capacity Development Division of the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa (UNECA), said the African continental free area, foreseen by the AfCFTA, will require half of Africa to obtain a legal identity. This was a prerequisite of forming well-functioning e-commerce markets, he said.

“The continental free trade area will offer opportunities of scale and the free movement of people, goods and services,” he said.

Several other speakers underlined the importance of connectivity in the continent where the rural populations are still dominant, as digital technology offered a route to their economic emancipation. It also provided a way to improve performance, traceability and trust along the value chain in, for example, agriculture.

They noted that Africa was full of creativity and that it was important for governments on the continent to retain its entrepreneurs, insisting that affordable connectivity is the first precondition of building the digital economy.

About Geraldine Boechat 2912 Articles
Senior Editor for Medafrica Times and former journalist for Swiss National Television. former NGO team leader in Burundi and Somalia