africa-eu trade in agriculture products – setting the scene · 2018-12-07 · africa-eu trade in...

Post on 07-Apr-2020

1 Views

Category:

Documents

0 Downloads

Preview:

Click to see full reader

TRANSCRIPT

Africa-EU trade in agriculture products –setting the sceneAnders Aeroe, Director, Division of Enterprises and Institutions, International Trade Centre (ITC)

Presenter
Presentation Notes
2 Minutes Introduction

A Poll

What is the share of total exports from Africa that goes to the EU?

• Less than 20%• 20%-30%• 30%-40% • More than 40%

Population Growth, Urbanization and Structural Change in Africa

Total Population Africa 1950-2100

Source: World Population Prospects, United Nations 2017

Africa: Urban and Rural Population as Proportion of Total Population, 1950–2050

Source: World Urbanization Prospects, United Nations, 2015

Legend:Purple: UrbanBlue: Rural

Sectoral Employment Shares in Africa & Other World Regions

African Agricultural Production and Trade

Quick Facts About African Agriculture

1. Agriculture provides around 50% of total employment in Africa2. The average African farmer is 60 years old - while 60 percent of SSA’s

population is under 24 years old3. Approximately half of the farmers are women4. The average African farm size is 2.4 hectares5. Small plots and low productivity have lead to poverty. About three quarters of

the African population live of less than $2, half of the population of less than $1.25 per day. People in rural areas are more often struck by poverty.

6. The poorest 20 per cent of the population benefit most from agricultural GDP growth.

Africa’s Agricultural Productivity Growth Rate (%)

Source: IFPRI Agricultural Productivity in Africa: Trends, Patterns, and Determinants

Presenter
Presentation Notes

African Agricultural Production Trends

1. Cereal production has increased by 125%, yields by 32%, and cultivated land by 70% in 30 years

2. In the last 30 years, productivity per agricultural worker has increased by a factor of 1.6 in Africa, and by a factor of 2.5 in Asia

3. Large agricultural productivity gap between African countries. The most productive African countries are around 10 times more productive than the least productive (for maize and cassava)

4. Agricultural production in Africa has not kept pace with population growth

5. Climate variations and water access severely influence the performance of the agricultural sector

12

Climate Change Risks Impact AgricultureClimate change risk for

agro-climatic zonesFlood frequency

Source: Kenya National Adaptation Plan

Vulnerability

Africa’s Overall Trade with the EUEurope is overall Africa’s largest export market. 35% of total exports from Africa go to the EU: food & beverages, manufacturers and raw materials

Most African countries have duty-free and quota-free access to the EU markets

African exports to the EU are regulated by five trade agreements:1) Economic Partnership Agreements (EPAs): 12 SSA countries2) Everything-But-Arms (EBA): 32 LDCs3) Trade Agreements with North Africa: 4 North African countries4) Generalised Scheme of Preferences Plus (GSP+): 1 country5) Generalised Scheme of Preferences (GSP): 2 countries

Source: European Commission: EU trade policy and Africa’s exports, Dec. 2017

Evolution of Africa's Agro-food Trade

01020

$ bi

llion

Exports

to the rest of the worldto the EUto Africa

The growth of Africa’s agro-food imports has outpaced the growth of its exports

With trade with the Rest of the World surging, the EU has lost its position as the main destination market for Africa’s agro-food exports

02040

2001

2003

2005

2007

2009

2011

2013

2015

2017

$ bi

llion

Imports

from the rest of the worldfrom the EUfrom Africa

Source: ITC calculations

Africa’s Trade Balance in Agro-food

-10,6

-15,1

-5,9

-10,0

6,53,6

6,95,9

-16

-12

-8

-4

0

4

8

2001

2002

2003

2004

2005

2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

2015

2016

2017

$ bi

llion

Rest of the world

With imports growing faster than exports, the trade deficit has widened, turning Africainto a net importer of agro-food products

While Africa has a surplus in agro-food trade with the EU, it runs a $10 billion deficit with the Rest of the World.

Africa’s Agro-food Exports to the EU, by Sector

*Values in USD billion ITC Calculations: EPM trade dataset using 2013-2017 weighted averages of reliable direct and mirror reports

Untapped potential in agro-food, by partner region and sub-sector

ITC estimates an additional $40 billion in agro-food exports to be possible by 2022, should growth develop in line with forecasts and market frictions be fully removed.

$28 billion of these additional exports could be realized in commodities, but $12 billion would be possible in processed and value-added agro-food products, like cocoa paste and butter (HS 180310 & 180400) or prepared tunas (HS 160414).

In fact, relative to the size of the sector, export growth opportunities are highest in value-added products, especially in markets other than the EU.

66%66%

61%65%

66%66%

80%70%

68%

0 10 20 30 40 50

Agro-food, processedAgro-food, raw

All other sectorsAgro-food, processed

Agro-food, rawAll other sectors

Agro-food, processedAgro-food, raw

All other sectors

Afric

aEU

Rest

of

the

wor

ld

$ billionRealized potential Untapped potential

*Percentages correspond to the share of untapped in total export potential

Top African agro-food sectors with untapped potential to the EU

0 5 10

Tea & mateVegetables

PulsesBeverages (not…

Beverages (alcoholic)Flowers

NutsSpices

Oil seedsOther food products

Fish products…Coffee

Fish & shellfishFruits

Cocoa beans & products

$ billion

Realized potential Unrealized potential

Cocoa beans & products, currently already the largest export sector to the EU, offers another $4.2 billion in room for export growth.

Other sectors, including beverages, oil seeds, vegetables and nuts have shares of unrealized potential > 70%, indicating that stepping up production capacities and removing market frictions could significantly boost export growth.

Export Potential and Job Creation in Ethiopia

20

-

50

100

150

200

250

300

-

200.000

400.000

600.000

800.000

1.000.000

1.200.000

$ m

illion

Direct jobs Indirect jobs Induced jobs Unrealized potential

In Ethiopia 3.9 million jobs (1.6 million jobs for women) could be created if the country fully realized its export potential of $800 million across agro-food sectors.

Exporting to EU Generates Comparatively Less Obstacles than Exporting to Africa

0%

5%

10%

15%

20%

25%

30%

35%

40%

45%

Africa EU28 Rest of the world

Share of NTMs Share of exports (2015)

• African surveyed countries exported around 20% of their value within Africa.

• At the same time, it was the source of 29% of the NTMs

• When exporting from Africa to EU, 40% of the trade is related to 39% of the NTMs

Source: ITC’s NTM Surveys

Presenter
Presentation Notes
Survey scope : agricultural products = 01. Fresh food and raw agro-based products + 02. Processed food and agro-based products. Export value based on the exports of the following surveyed countries: BEN BFA CIV COM EGY ETH GIN KEN MAR MDG MLI MUS MWI RWA SEN SYC TUN TZA UGA

Thank You

top related