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The Impact of EU Free Trade Agreements on Economic Development and Regional Integration in Southern Africa

The Example of EU-SACU Trade Relations

by Mareike Meyn (Author)
©2006 Thesis 456 Pages

Summary

North-South Free Trade Agreements are supposed to improve African countries’ access to competitive inputs and consumer goods, to assist in creating an enabling trading environment and to help to improve the competitiveness of domestic companies by involving them in international networks. Negative effects such as revenue losses and trade diversion are meant to be offset by safeguard measures, technical assistance, and economic growth. The effects of a free trade agreement between the EU and the Southern African Customs Union (SACU) countries, especially relating to export performance, diversification efforts, industrialisation options and efforts for deeper regional integration, are the major questions the study addresses. In studying sector examples in the SACU countries for successful industrial policy, an investigation is undertaken of how a free trade agreement between the EU and the SACU countries affects domestic policies, economic performance and the position of sectors in the global value chain. The conclusion drawn is that free trade agreements concluded between the EU and southern African countries failed to be development-oriented. Subsequently, policy recommendations are made as to how EU policies towards southern Africa can take industrial development, export diversification and a move towards deeper regional integration better into account.

Details

Pages
456
Publication Year
2006
ISBN (Softcover)
9783631553541
Language
English
Keywords
Europäische Union Southern African Customs Union Entwicklungsökonomie Freihandelsabkommen Industriepolitik Handelspolitik Freihandel
Published
Frankfurt am Main, Berlin, Bern, Bruxelles, New York, Oxford, Wien, 2006. 456 pp., num. fig. and tables

Biographical notes

Mareike Meyn (Author)

The Author: Mareike Meyn was born in 1973 in Lüneburg. She studied economics and socio-economics in Hamburg (1995-2000). From 2002 to 2005 she worked as a research fellow at the Institute for World Economics and International Management (IWIM) at the University of Bremen. She has written various publications, conducted research and spent significant periods of time in the SACU region since first visiting Namibia in 1998.

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Title: The Impact of EU Free Trade Agreements on Economic Development and Regional Integration in Southern Africa