Strengthening the Role of Parliaments in Advancing Regional Trade Integration through the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA)
Connecting 1.4 billion people across 55 African countries with a combined gross domestic product (GDP) exceeding US $3 trillion, the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) represents the world’s largest free trade area and presents an unprecedented opportunity to accelerate intra-African trade, drive industrialization, and promote sustainable economic development across the continent. According to United Nations Economic Commission for Africa (UNECA), full implementation of the AfCFTA by 2045 could enable the continent to increase its GDP by $141 billion and intra-African trade by $276 billion, compared to the baseline situation without the AfCFTA.[1] UNECA analysis also indicates a net intra-African trade gain of $3 trillion ($1.4 trillion for GDP) between 2021 and 2024. Furthermore, in the context of heightened geopolitical tensions and subsequent rise in international tariffs, the AfCFTA can help promote the resilience of African industries by facilitating their shift toward alternative regional markets.
As the implementation of AfCFTA advances, parliaments have a critical role to play in ensuring that continental trade commitments translate into concrete development outcomes for citizens. In the Southern African Development Community (SADC), parliamentarians are uniquely positioned to provide oversight, ensure accountability, promote inclusive policy design, and align continental and regional commitments with national development priorities. However, fulfilling this requires targeted capacity building, particularly in areas such as trade policy formulation, the reduction of non-trade barriers, digital trade, investment facilitation, and gender-responsive oversight.
This training programme is designed to equip parliamentarians with the knowledge and tools to engage in AfCFTA implementation, revise or shape legislation in response to the shifting economic dynamics and advocate for development amongst the member states. The initiative aligns with the forum’s commitment to hastening the pace of economic cooperation, development, and integration on the basis of equity and mutual benefit.
Objectives
The overall objective of the initiative is to strengthen the capacity of SADC parliamentarians to effectively participate in and monitor the implementation of the SADC protocols and AfCFTA, ensuring that regional trade integration promotes inclusive and sustainable economic development.
This third session will focus on the role of parliamentarians in trade policy: from negotiation to oversight, covering issues such as:
- Oversight of negotiation mandates and national interests
- Ensuring inclusiveness and transparency in negotiations
- Participating in national trade consultations
- Reviewing and approving trade agreements
- Ensuring the alignment of domestic laws with international commitments
- Monitoring implementation of trade commitments
Taisuke Ito is the Chief of the Trading Systems Section, Division on International Trade and Commodities, at UN Trade and Development (UNCTAD).
He leads the work of a team responsible for trade preferences, South-South trade cooperation and the multilateral trading system, and serves as the Focal Point for the Global System of Trade Preferences among Developing Countries (GSTP).
He holds a master's degree in international relations from the Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies in Geneva.
