Accra, Jan 25, -The joint
Economic Partnership Agreement (EPA) between Ghana and the European Union on
Wednesday in Accra started deliberations to adopt rules of procedures for
effective implementation of the agreement.
The EPA was ratified by the
Parliaments of Ghana, and the European Community and its Members in August and
December 2016.
The agreement provides duty-free
and quota-free access to all Ghana’s exports, agricultural or manufactured
products to the EU market, while the country would gradually and partially
liberalise imports from the EU.
Mr Carlos Ahenkorah, the Deputy
Minister of Trade and Industry, said the importance of trade to the growth and
development of any nation was critical because it had the potential of
guaranteeing economic growth and lifting millions of people out of poverty.
“Deriving maximum and mutual
benefits from a development-oriented partnership entails improving production
capacity and exports; and engaging business regulatory reforms to stimulate
growth and competitiveness,” he added.
Mr Ahenkorah said the EU was the
leading destination of Ghana`s export consignments for traditional and
non-traditional products such as cocoa, fruits, vegetables and processed fish
and the largest provider of development assistance , and the biggest source of
foreign direct investments.
According to the Minister, under
the EU Trade Related Assistance and Quality Enabling Programme, agencies such
as the Ghana Standards Authority, Food and Drugs Authority, the Council for
Scientific and Industrial Research had been supplied with state-of-the-art
laboratory equipment to facilitate the conduct of their analysis and research.
He said the work of the Joint
Committee should enable both Contracting Parties to know the opportunities for
investment and business expansion in both jurisdictions, and further appreciate
the emerging policy and legislative changes that were vital to the survival of
SMEs in the country.
He commended the EU to support
the identification of capacity needs and the establishment of a Secretariat
within EPA Governance at the Ministry, for effective implementation and
monitoring of the Strategy.
“It is my expectation that the
competence and rich expertise of members of the Joint EPA Committee will help
mitigate ‘behind the border measures’ such as Rules of Origin, High Standards
and Technical Barriers disguised as trade policy tools, which continue to
restrict competition and hamper effective integration into the global
value-chain”.
Mr William Hanna, the Head of
European Union Delegation to Ghana, said both parties agreed to set up an
appropriate mechanism of monitoring of the implementation of the agreement and
also continued exchange papers with the proposal of each party on the
agreement.
He said the EU was working with
Ghana to further diversify and expand the country’s production and export
capacity especially in the agriculture sector.
He said the EU was fully
committed to supporting the strategy and providing a total of 12 million euro
through the 11th European Development Fund to support its implementation.
Mr Hanna said the EU would submit
a draft decision proposal for endorsement by the next EPA committee meeting,
adding that the second meeting would take place in Brussels during the 1st
quarter in 2019.
GNA
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