Nigeria may lose up to $1.3 trillion in
revenues if it signs the Economic Partnership Agreement, the
Manufacturers’ Association of Nigeria has said on Monday.
The EPA is a free trade deal between Economic Community of West African States and European Union.
The Committee of Heads of State and
Governments of ECOWAS endorsed EPA in July 2014 and opened it for
signature by member states.
But in spite of being beneficiary to the
letters of EPA, including a 6.5 billion pledge by the EU to support
infrastructure development in the ECOWAS region in a 2015 to 2020
programme, Nigeria is one of three states yet to sign the document.
Other ECOWAS states yet to sign the deal are Ghana and Ivory Coast.
Nigeria fears that the deal may
undermine its economic interest considering that it involves two regions
with unequal economic strengths.
Prof. Yemi Osinbajo, the Vice President
of Nigeria, in June during the 49th Ordinary Session of ECOWAS in Dakar,
said that the government would consult key players, such as MAN, before
deciding on the agreement.
MAN President, Mr Frank Jacobs, in a
statement on Monday said, “Nigeria should at this time look at ways we
can come out of the economic recession by generating more foreign
exchange from exports instead of signing such agreement.
“We totally oppose signing if the
agreement because it will stifle the Nigerian market and hinder the
government’s effort at industrialisation with finished items from
European countries.
“As an estimate, Nigeria can lose up to 1.3 trillion dollars if the partnership is signed.
“The nation currently lacks the
technology to produce finished goods with its commodities where it has
comparative advantage, signing the EPA will stifle all these efforts.
“The markets will be further choked with
products that will cause undue competition to the existing locally
manufactured products, and we currently lack the capacity to flood the
European market with our own products.”
He further said that the EPA would stifle the informal trading sector which included the major population.
Jacobs said that all manufacturers were
opposed to Nigeria signing EPA because the country generally lacked
capacity to compete with Europe.
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