The
first ever continental conference on intra-African trade finance and payment
systems and their impact on the achievement of enhanced trade among African countries
opened in Abidjan yesterday with Dr. Benedict Oramah, President of the African
Export-Import Bank (Afreximbank), saying that putting Africa on the path to
industrialization and greater relevance in global affairs called for the
fostering of greater intra-African trade.
Dr. Oramah told guests at the
opening of the Intra-African Trade Finance and Payment Systems Conference that
the sorry state of affairs that had seen Africa staying at the lowest rungs of
the development ladder was attributable to the fractious nature of the continent.
“With 54 countries, Africa is the
continent with the highest number of constituent countries; it is the continent
that is least interconnected infrastructure-wise; it is the region with the
least intra-regional banking relationships; and, above all, it is the continent
that trades the least with itself,” he said.
Dr. Oramah, reiterated Afreximbank’s
commitment to being the intra-African trade bank envisaged by its founders,
explaining that the institution had “developed solutions that touch the
producers of goods and services, the traders and the buyers. We will be there
from farm to mouth and from factory to the home!”
He pledged Afreximbank’s
determination “to ensure that, in the foreseeable future, never again
will intra-African trade be in the periphery of Africa's international trade;
never again will Africa's economic fortunes be heavily tied to commodities; and
never again will African economies be mere appendages of other markets”.
In her contribution, Fatima Haram
Acyl, the African Union Commissioner for Trade and Industry, said that ensuring
effective trade finance was key to the achievement of trade development across
Africa through the creation of businesses and jobs.
Ms. Acyl urged for a review of the
role African central banks in the development of the continent in order to
ensure the existence of interest rates that served the needs of key sectors.
According to her, continuing with the present high interest rate regimes was
not sustainable.
She
described intra-African trade as a critical part of the continental agenda and
noted that that fact had been acknowledged by African heads of state through
their decision to set up an African continental free trade area.
Africa
could not continue to be exporters of raw materials, she argued, explaining
that through the proposed continental free trade area, the continent could
achieve the much needed structural transformation and sustainable growth.
Declaring
the conference open, Adama Kone, Minister of Economy and Finance of Cote
d’Ivoire, who stood in for Prime Minister Daniel Kablan Duncan, commended the
work being done by Afreximbank to enhance intra-African trade and stressed the
importance of capacity building and skills development as crucial elements in
developing intra-African trade.
The opening of the conference was
followed by the unveiling of a plaque to launch Afreximbank’s Intra-African
Trade Strategy, which sets out the Bank’s intra-African trade finance and
payment facilitation intentions.
The
conference, which ends tomorrow, is providing a platform for industry
participants to exchange information on intra-African trade finance and payment
systems and to identify solutions to the financing challenges confronting
intra-African trade.
Participants include chief
executives and senior representatives of banks, law firms, think tanks, export
credit agencies, logistics companies, regional economic communities, the
African Union, central banks and other financial institutions involved in
supporting trade in Africa. Others are from trading companies engaged in
intra-African trade.
Obi Emekekwue
Afreximbank External Communications
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