ACTSA – Action for Southern Africa Saturday, February 04, 2012

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Trade justice

Instead of being free to follow economic policies that best suit them, poor countries in southern Africa are being put under enormous pressure to open up their markets and expose their producers to unfair competition.

Trade could help poor countries develop, but instead the rules are stacked up against them. Southern African countries are being forced to reduce their trade barriers, so heavily subsidised products from overseas flood their markets, while rich countries impose high taxes on processed goods sold on their markets.

ACTSA aims to influence decision makers to ensure that the eradication of poverty and sustainable growth is central to trade negotiations.

Economic Partnership Agreements

Economic Partnership Agreements (EPAs) are trade agreements the European Union (EU) is forcing on African, Caribbean and Pacific countries (ACPs). These regional agreements liberalise trade between the EU and ACP countries, threatening to have a disastrous impact on jobs, small farmers livelihoods, local industry and the environment for developing countries, especially in southern Africa.

Rather than helping poor countries use trade to overcome poverty, EPAs in their current form will flood African markets with European goods, causing harm to vulnerable people and increasing poverty. EPAs will only benefit European countries while worsening the already difficult situation in southern Africa by undermining intra-Africa regional cooperation and integration, destroying jobs and creating problems in critical sectors including education, health and poverty reduction.

ACTSA wants to see the European Union promote a pro-development trade policy. Read ACTSA's briefing paper on EPAs and support our calls for fairer trade.

 

“The EU must change their trade policies to open up their markets for goods from developing countries. The double standards must come to an end.”
Zwelinzima Vavi, General Secretary, Congress of South African Trade Unions
 
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Action for Southern Africa - Peace, Justice, Solidarity   Email:actsa@actsa.org   Tel:020 3263 2001   Fax:020 7931 9398  231 Vauxhall Bridge Road London SW1V 1EH