• Live Radio
  • Videos
  • About
  • Contact
  • Despite Media
Ghana Election 2020
  • Home
  • Local News
  • Politics
  • Showbiz
  • Sports
  • Business
  • Opinion
  • VIDEOS
  • Media
    • Videos
    • Audio
    • Live Radio
    • Photos
  • Election 2020
Local News
 
 
 
Home Business Business News 201210

We Must Brace For Economic Partnership Agreement

29-Oct-2012
/ Business News, Business
Email
Print
Comments 0
(0)
Comments
Share on Facebook Share on Twitter
 

Ghana must stop dithering on the controversial Economic Partnership Agreement (EPA) with the European Union and brace itself for competition from the global market, Dr. Joe Abbey of the Centre for Policy Analysis (CEPA) has said.

He said while Europe has got itself prepared for the EPA, Ghana has been “pussyfooting” and “now will pay for it”.

Speaking last week at the launch of a book on Globalisation, Trade and Poverty in Ghana, Dr. Abbey said opening up to the rest of the world is not “optional” for Ghana, and that the country should rather prepare itself to take advantage of the bigger global market.

“For me, the question is how do we reduce the cost of doing business in this country? That is the way to make ourselves competitive,” he said.

“We must understand that we cannot be in a world in which we are afraid of competition; rather, we must lower the cost of doing business in Ghana. That is the only way we can liberalise and still be able to survive.”
“Radical Ideologues”

Dr. Abbey’s comments come amid heightened advocacy by civil society actors, who have been counselling government against signing the EPA -- a scheme to create a free trade area between the European Union on one side and the African, Caribbean and Pacific Group of States (ACP) on the other.

Among other provisions under the EPA, the EU will liberalise 100 percent (except rice and sugar) of its trade with ACP countries -- this means that except for those two, all goods originating from ACP nations including Ghana can enter the EU territories 100 percent quota- and tariff-free.

In turn, ACP countries will liberalise 80 percent of duties on imports from the EU over a 15-year period. The Economic Justice Network (EJN), a coalition of civil society organisations, said in May that Ghana will lose US$378million if it signs the EPA.

But Dr. Abbey said: “radical ideologues” in the country have hijacked the negotiation process by condemning the EPAs without offering solutions.

“For me, it is the ideologues that have wasted our time. They are the ones that must be talked to; they must come with analyses or shut up.”

He added that Ghana cannot go on complaining forever, likening the situation to a fretful student who, instead of preparing himself for an examination, chooses rather to moan about the possibility of failure.

“You must accept that there is going to be exams and stop pussyfooting and wasting everybody’s time. Globalisation is not something that is optional; it is not optional for Ghana.”

China, not Europe, is the threat Europe, according to the CEPA boss, is not the biggest threat to Africa’s economy but cheap imports from China and other Asian countries.

He said Ghana cannot go the way of Nigeria which has objected to the EPA because that country boasts a large domestic market and gets sufficient foreign exchange from oil exports.

“Nigeria doesn't want to concede anything because it doesn't need anybody’s market. Sooner or later, Ghana will come to the realization that its domestic economy is too small and cannot hide from the global economy.”

Interim EPA
The EPAs are a key element of the Cotonou Agreement, a treaty for development cooperation between the EU and ACP states, and were supposed to have taken effect in 2008. But disagreements among the partners have stalled the negotiations and held back implementation.

Before the 2008 deadline, however, Ghana and La Côte D’Ivoire, members of ECOWAS -- one of the seven regional groupings of ACP countries negotiating the agreements with the EU -- went ahead to “initial” an Interim EPA (IEPA).

This allowed the two countries to continue benefitting from quota- and duty-free access to the EU market while they concluded negotiations for a full EPA. The European Commission has said that, by early 2014, countries which fail to ratify the EPA will cease to benefit from preferential trade terms with the EU.

“Ghana can no longer linger on the question of signature and ratification: the country now has to ratify the IEPA quickly, otherwise it risks losing important trade preferences -- which could derail some economic sectors (in agro-industry and fishery) and lead to high unemployment,” said the EU on its official position regarding the matter.

Awaiting ECOWAS consensus
In August, Trade and Industry Minister, Hannah Tetteh, told the B&FT that government was actively engaged in discussions toward having an ECOWAS platform for the ratification of the full EPA.

“But as a country we have the interim EPA as a fall-back should we not reach a consensus within the stipulated time-frame. “It is true that in signing the full EPA we will gain in some areas and lose in others, but we need to measure the gains against the losses and decide on what is best for the nation,” she said.

Source: Thebftonline.com

 

 
 

 

Comments ( 0 ): Post Your Comments >>

Disclaimer: Opinions expressed here are those of the writers and do not reflect those of Peacefmonline.com. Peacefmonline.com accepts no responsibility legal or otherwise for their accuracy of content. Please report any inappropriate content to us, and we will evaluate it as a matter of priority.
Featured Video
Previous Post

Porting Crosses Half-a-million Mark

Next Post

Parliament Passes Tax Amnesty Bill

 
 

More Stories

KFC In Good Standing With ECG - Management Assures Customers
CEO Of Quick Angels Richard Quaye Gifts 10 Entrepreneurs With Free Seed Capital On His Birthday
Vodafone Cash And Mobile Money Limited Partner To Enable Merchant Interoperability
MobileMoney Limited And Vodafone Ghana Partner To Enable Merchant Interoperability
Huawei’s FinTech 2.0 To Support Ghana’s Mobile Money, Deepen Financial Inclusion
Vodafone Cash Leads The Charge For Digital Financial Inclusion In Ghana
Ghana's Debt Forgiveness Request From China Unlikely To Succeed - Isaac Adongo
UMB Celebrates BOST Revival At Customer Recognition Event
Vehicle Components Manufacturers Explore Avenues In Ghana
Next Post

Parliament Passes Tax Amnesty Bill

  Ghana Business News

  • General News
  • Economy
  • Banking & Finance
  • Stock Market
  • Industry/Manufacturing


 
 

Other Business News Stories

  • KFC In Good Standing With ECG - Management Assures Customers

  • CEO Of Quick Angels Richard Quaye Gifts 10 Entrepreneurs With Free Seed Capital On His Birthday

  • Vodafone Cash And Mobile Money Limited Partner To Enable Merchant Interoperability

  • MobileMoney Limited And Vodafone Ghana Partner To Enable Merchant Interoperability

  • Huawei’s FinTech 2.0 To Support Ghana’s Mobile Money, Deepen Financial Inclusion

  • Vodafone Cash Leads The Charge For Digital Financial Inclusion In Ghana

  • Ghana's Debt Forgiveness Request From China Unlikely To Succeed - Isaac Adongo

  • UMB Celebrates BOST Revival At Customer Recognition Event

  • Vehicle Components Manufacturers Explore Avenues In Ghana

  • BOST, beacon of corporate governance-Veep

 

 
 

Popular Videos

Akan News @ Midday On Peace 104.3 FM (18/3/2023)

Kokrokoo Discussion Segment On Peace 104.3 FM (20/03/2023)

Kokrokoo Live On Peace 104.3 FM (20/03/2023)

Akan News @ 6am On Peace 104.3 FM (19/3/2023)

AKOKO ABON ON HELLO101.5FM WITH SAMUEL JOACHIM BOKEEM(18/03/2023)

Peace Power Sports (20/03/2023)

Peace FM Online and Despite Media

peacefmonline.com offers its reading audience with a comprehensive online source for up-to-the-minute news about politics, business, entertainment and other issues in Ghana

Follow us on social media:

Category

  • Home
  • Local News
  • Politics
  • Showbiz
  • Sports
  • Business
  • Opinion
  • Trivia
  • Foreign
  • Audio
  • Photos
  • Videos
  • Elections
Decision Time
Ghana Election 2020 2016 Elections
Services
Live Radio Audio on Demand Ghana Elections Advertise with Us
Useful Links
Despite Media About Us Contact Us Feedback Form Terms and Conditions Privacy
Our Brands
Despite Media UTV Peace FM Okay FM Hello FM Neat FM Peacefmonline
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Contact
  • Privacy

© 2020 Peacefmonline.com - An online portal owned and managed by Despite Media

  • Home
  • Local News
  • Politics
  • Showbiz
  • Sports
  • Business
  • Articles
  • Trivia
  • Foreign
  • Live Radio
  • Photos
  • Videos
  • Audio
  • Election 2020

© 2020 Peacefmonline.com - An online portal owned and managed by Despite Media