An Assessment of the Short Term Impact of the ECOWAS-CET and EU-EPA in Senegal

In recent years, there have been major changes in the trade policy landscape in West Africa that will affect Senegal. The Common External Tariff (CET) for (ECOWAS) and European Union-Economic Partnership Agreement (EU-EPA) have generated an intense...

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Main Authors: Marchat, Jean-Michel, von Uexkull, Erik
Format: Working Paper
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/209801480496403751/An-assessment-of-the-short-term-impact-of-the-ECOWAS-CET-and-EU-EPA-in-Senegal
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/25756
id okr-10986-25756
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-257562021-05-25T08:56:13Z An Assessment of the Short Term Impact of the ECOWAS-CET and EU-EPA in Senegal Marchat, Jean-Michel von Uexkull, Erik regional trade trade policy public revenue competition access to finance input trade global value chains services export competitiveness competition policy In recent years, there have been major changes in the trade policy landscape in West Africa that will affect Senegal. The Common External Tariff (CET) for (ECOWAS) and European Union-Economic Partnership Agreement (EU-EPA) have generated an intense debate among policy makers, interest groups and the general population. The CET aims at the establishment of a customs union for ECOWAS countries through ‘the adoption of a common external tariff and a common trade policy vis-à-vis third countries.’ It was adopted at a Heads of State Summit in October 2013 in Dakar and is to be implemented from 2015. When initially designed in the mid-2000s, the CET was organized in four tariff bands: 0 percent for essential social goods, 5 percent for goods of primary necessity, raw materials and specific inputs, 10 percent for intermediate goods and 20 percent for final consumption goods. Since then, Nigeria has obtained the introduction of a fifth band at 35 percent for ‘specific goods for economic development’ (essentially agricultural goods and some consumer goods). The first section of the paper presents an analysis of the impact of the CET and EU-EPA on protection levels, trade flows and state revenues, changes in the price of the consumption bundles for households and impact on firm’s profits. The second section underlines some key elements of an accompanying policy agenda and a third section concludes. 2016-12-15T19:58:37Z 2016-12-15T19:58:37Z 2016-10-27 Working Paper http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/209801480496403751/An-assessment-of-the-short-term-impact-of-the-ECOWAS-CET-and-EU-EPA-in-Senegal http://hdl.handle.net/10986/25756 English en_US CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research Publications & Research :: Working Paper Africa Senegal
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
en_US
topic regional trade
trade policy
public revenue
competition
access to finance
input trade
global value chains
services
export competitiveness
competition policy
spellingShingle regional trade
trade policy
public revenue
competition
access to finance
input trade
global value chains
services
export competitiveness
competition policy
Marchat, Jean-Michel
von Uexkull, Erik
An Assessment of the Short Term Impact of the ECOWAS-CET and EU-EPA in Senegal
geographic_facet Africa
Senegal
description In recent years, there have been major changes in the trade policy landscape in West Africa that will affect Senegal. The Common External Tariff (CET) for (ECOWAS) and European Union-Economic Partnership Agreement (EU-EPA) have generated an intense debate among policy makers, interest groups and the general population. The CET aims at the establishment of a customs union for ECOWAS countries through ‘the adoption of a common external tariff and a common trade policy vis-à-vis third countries.’ It was adopted at a Heads of State Summit in October 2013 in Dakar and is to be implemented from 2015. When initially designed in the mid-2000s, the CET was organized in four tariff bands: 0 percent for essential social goods, 5 percent for goods of primary necessity, raw materials and specific inputs, 10 percent for intermediate goods and 20 percent for final consumption goods. Since then, Nigeria has obtained the introduction of a fifth band at 35 percent for ‘specific goods for economic development’ (essentially agricultural goods and some consumer goods). The first section of the paper presents an analysis of the impact of the CET and EU-EPA on protection levels, trade flows and state revenues, changes in the price of the consumption bundles for households and impact on firm’s profits. The second section underlines some key elements of an accompanying policy agenda and a third section concludes.
format Working Paper
author Marchat, Jean-Michel
von Uexkull, Erik
author_facet Marchat, Jean-Michel
von Uexkull, Erik
author_sort Marchat, Jean-Michel
title An Assessment of the Short Term Impact of the ECOWAS-CET and EU-EPA in Senegal
title_short An Assessment of the Short Term Impact of the ECOWAS-CET and EU-EPA in Senegal
title_full An Assessment of the Short Term Impact of the ECOWAS-CET and EU-EPA in Senegal
title_fullStr An Assessment of the Short Term Impact of the ECOWAS-CET and EU-EPA in Senegal
title_full_unstemmed An Assessment of the Short Term Impact of the ECOWAS-CET and EU-EPA in Senegal
title_sort assessment of the short term impact of the ecowas-cet and eu-epa in senegal
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2016
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/209801480496403751/An-assessment-of-the-short-term-impact-of-the-ECOWAS-CET-and-EU-EPA-in-Senegal
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/25756
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