The United States and the five member countries of the Southern African
Customs Union (SACU) -- Botswana, Lesotho, Namibia, South Africa and Swaziland-
launched negotiations toward a free trade agreement (FTA) in Pretoria, South
Africa on June 2, 2003. This historic initiative represents an exciting new
beginning in the growing trade and investment partnership between the United
States and southern Africa and a tremendous opportunity for all Parties. It will
be the first U.S. FTA in sub-Saharan Africa and the first time the SACU nations
have jointly negotiated such an agreement. By building on the success of the
African Growth and Opportunity Act (AGOA) and creating a comprehensive
infrastructure for trade and investment, the FTA will bring new hope and
prosperity to southern Africa and the United States, further drive regional
growth and development, and provide for a common economic future.
New Opportunities
Free trade with southern Africa is a vital part of the Bush Administration's
broader effort to drive global trade liberalization, to lower consumer costs, to
create new commercial opportunities for U.S. companies, farmers and workers in
fast growing regions of the world, and to draw developing countries into the
mainstream of the global economy.
Through an FTA, the United States would gain guaranteed preferential access
to its largest export market in sub-Saharan Africa – worth more than $2.5
billion in 2002. An FTA is also an opportunity to level the playing field in
areas where U.S. exporters were disadvantaged by the European Union's free trade
agreement with South Africa and to create an environment that enables an
expanded U.S. trade and investment. Leading U.S. sales to the region include
machinery, vehicles, aircraft, medical instruments, plastics, chemicals,
cereals, pharmaceuticals and wood and paper products. U.S. foreign direct
investment in the SACU countries totaled $2.8 billion in 2000.
An FTA will also help to forge and advance common objectives in the WTO Doha
Development Agenda. Bilateral and regional FTA's create valuable competition for
liberalization. They can serve as laboratories for liberalization and models for
global negotiations by establishing innovative new disciplines, especially to
deal with fresher topics on the globalization agenda – such as e-commerce,
intellectual property in a digital economy, labor and environmental cooperation
and expanding services trade.
Building on the Success of AGOA
For southern Africa, the FTA is an opportunity to build on the success of
AGOA and to move the growing commercial ties between southern Africa and the
United States from one way preferences to full partnership. The SACU countries
are leading AGOA beneficiaries, accounting for more than 70 percent of U.S.
non-fuel imports under this program in 2001. South Africa is the largest
supplier of non-fuel AGOA goods to the United States. Lesotho is top apparel
exporter, and Botswana, Namibia, and Swaziland have seen their total exports to
the U.S. increase by 40 to 75 percent in the last year. These countries have
seen the positive role that trade can play in promoting economic growth and
development. Now, they're taking an important step toward deeper commercial
engagement with the United States.
Free trade is an opportunity to improve southern Africa's commercial
competitiveness and to better position the region for success in the U.S. market
and the global economy. An FTA can also help these countries attract much needed
new foreign direct investment. International investors prefer access to a large
and integrated market. Guaranteed duty-free access to the world's largest market
will further increase the attractiveness of the region as a link in the
increasingly integrated global supply chain. The FTA can help drive economic
integration in southern Africa and promote the goals of the New Partnership for
Africa's Development (NEPAD). It also offers an opportunity to further link
trade to the region's own economic growth, development and poverty alleviation
strategies.
A Partnership for Prosperity
The U.S. is committed to provide the technical assistance necessary for SACU
to assume the responsibilities of full partnership and to share in the benefits
of free trade. The United States and SACU have established a special cooperative
group on trade capacity building specifically for these negotiations, with $2
million in initial funding from the U.S. Agency for International Development.
The cooperative group will meet regularly during the negotiations to identify
needs and swiftly direct technical assistance resources to help SACU countries
better prepare for and participate in negotiations, implement agreed
commitments, and take advantage of free trade. This effort builds on the
longstanding U.S. commitment to trade capacity building in southern Africa and
across the developing world. The United States is the largest donor of
trade-related technical assistance, accounting for more than 37 percent of the
$1.48 billion in global funding in 2001.