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New Report: Government must act to halt damaging trade agreements (16.04.07)

The UK Government is being urged to prevent EU trade negotiators from forcing poor countries to sign up to trade deals that will harm poverty reduction and development.

A new report from Christian relief and development agency Tearfund - Much to Lose, Little to Gain - criticises the EU for pressuring Africa and other countries to agree new trade deals by the end of the year. These agreements will require Malawi and other poor countries to liberalise their trade markets far beyond what has been under discussion at the World Trade Organisation (WTO). The EU is also pushing for commitments in areas such as investment that developing countries have for years rejected at the WTO. 

The report declares that negotiations for Economic Partnership Agreements (EPAs) have been grossly unbalanced and unfairly tied to future aid.

“Trade is vitally important to the development of poor countries,” says Mari Griffith, Trade Advisor at Tearfund, “but the kind of trade liberalisation and commitments in areas such as investment that the EU is foisting upon countries from Africa, the Caribbean and Pacific, could well set back their efforts to reduce poverty and ensure ongoing development.”

The report looks in detail at Malawi, whose GDP is less than half the annual profits of supermarket Tesco, concluding that EPAs as currently proposed would increase Malawi’s dependence on exporting only low-value raw commodities and undermine the country’s weak manufacturing sector and Malawi’s future industrialisation.

Under the proposed EPAs the EU would gain increased access for its goods to Malawi’s markets and to other markets in the region, which could spell collapse for Malawian producers not adequately prepared for competition.

Regional integration between Malawi and its neighbours is also threatened by forcing African countries to open up markets to EU goods and services before they’ve built up their own regional markets.

An EPA could also lead to a significant loss of revenue and induce other major adjustment costs, reducing the Government’s ability to provide basic services such as water and sanitation and increasing Malawi’s dependence on aid.

Mari Griffith continues: “EPA negotiations are cloaked in the language of partnership and development but in the grossly unbalanced negotiating dynamic between the EU and the ACP, the EC is using EPAs to force its own agenda in Africa.

“The UK Government has expressed concerns about the process and content of EPAs. They must now do more to engage in these talks and use their influence to stop the European Union from forcing unfair trade deals upon poor countries.”

 
Notes to Editors 

Tearfund Trade Advisor, Mari Griffith, is available for interview. Contact: Jonathan Spencer in the Press Office on 020 8943 7901

 

On Thursday 19th April, the Trade Justice Movement (of which Tearfund is a member) is holding a rally outside the German embassy calling on Germany, as President of the European Union, to ensure that the EU stops negotiating unfair trade deals with developing countries. Delegations will also visit every other EU embassy in London with the same message: don’t lock Africa into poverty. For a link to the report or more information on how to take action visit the Tearfund website: www.tearfund.org/trade or call 0845 355 8355.

 

Tearfund is the UK’s leading Christian relief and development agency, committed to addressing the causes of poverty in many of the poorest countries around the world.


This page was last updated on 19 June 2008

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We are Christians passionate about the local church bringing justice and transforming lives - overcoming global poverty.
So our ten-year vision is to see 50 million people released from material and spiritual poverty through a worldwide network of 100,000 local churches.

Tearfund is registered charity number 265464     Email: enquiries@tearfund.org     Tel: 0845 355 8355 (ROI: 00 44 845 355 8355)