id okr-10986-12385
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-123852021-04-23T14:03:00Z De-fragmenting Africa : Deepening Regional Trade Integration in Goods and Services World Bank CAPITAL GOODS COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGE EXPORT DEVELOPMENT TECHNOLOGICAL CAPACITYACCOUNTING AFFILIATES AGRICULTURE ALLOCATIVE EFFICIENCY BANK OF KOREA BANKING SYSTEM CAPITAL ACCUMULATION CAPITAL FORMATION CAPITAL GOODS CHEMICAL INDUSTRY COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGE CONSULTING SERVICES CONTRACTORS CREDIT RATIONING DEBT DEVELOPMENT STRATEGY DIVISION OF LABOR DOMESTIC DEMAND DOMESTIC MARKET ECONOMIC ACTIVITY ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT ECONOMIC GROWTH ECONOMIES OF SCALE EFFECTIVE USE ENGINEERING SERVICES ENGINEERS EXPENDITURES EXPORT GROWTH EXPORT INCENTIVES EXPORT INDUSTRIES EXPORT MARKETS EXPORT PERFORMANCE EXPORTERS EXPORTS FEASIBILITY STUDIES FIXED INVESTMENT FOREIGN EXCHANGE FOREIGN FIRMS FOREIGN INVESTMENT FOREIGN INVESTMENTS FORESTRY HUMAN This book is the result of an extensive agenda of analytical work on regional trade integration in Africa involving staff from various units of the Africa region of the World Bank. The aim of this volume is to provide the main messages from this work to a wide audience the private sector, civil society, key ministries, relevant agencies that is necessary to provide the consensus and broad base for successful implementation of reforms. Africa is not achieving its potential in regional trade. The contributions to this volume highlight the enormous scope for increased cross-border trade in Africa and the reasons why such opportunities are not being exploited. The main objective of this introductory chapter is to draw attention to the key reason why Africa's potential for regional trade remains unexploited: the high transaction costs that face those who trade across borders in Africa. The contributions to the volume discuss a wide range of policy related barriers that drive up costs and limit trade. The chapter starts with a review of recent export performance in Africa, noting the strong growth rates in many countries. However, the impact of such growth on employment and poverty has been much muted and important challenges remain, especially with regard to greater diversification of exports, and it is here that effective regional integration that reduces transaction costs can play a key role. The paper then discusses the key barriers that raise costs for traders and continue to fragment the African market. Finally, the paper ends with some specific recommendations for action that policy makers can take at the regional level to support integrated markets in Africa and discusses how the World Bank and other donors can support those wishing to implement the necessary reforms. 2013-02-19T19:24:35Z 2013-02-19T19:24:35Z 2012-01 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2012/01/16252822/de-fragmenting-africa-deepening-regional-trade-integration-goods-services http://hdl.handle.net/10986/12385 English en_US CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank Washington, DC Economic & Sector Work :: Development Policy Review (DPR) Economic & Sector Work Africa
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
en_US
topic CAPITAL GOODS
COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGE
EXPORT DEVELOPMENT
TECHNOLOGICAL CAPACITYACCOUNTING
AFFILIATES
AGRICULTURE
ALLOCATIVE EFFICIENCY
BANK OF KOREA
BANKING SYSTEM
CAPITAL ACCUMULATION
CAPITAL FORMATION
CAPITAL GOODS
CHEMICAL INDUSTRY
COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGE
CONSULTING SERVICES
CONTRACTORS
CREDIT RATIONING
DEBT
DEVELOPMENT STRATEGY
DIVISION OF LABOR
DOMESTIC DEMAND
DOMESTIC MARKET
ECONOMIC ACTIVITY
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
ECONOMIC GROWTH
ECONOMIES OF SCALE
EFFECTIVE USE
ENGINEERING SERVICES
ENGINEERS
EXPENDITURES
EXPORT GROWTH
EXPORT INCENTIVES
EXPORT INDUSTRIES
EXPORT MARKETS
EXPORT PERFORMANCE
EXPORTERS
EXPORTS
FEASIBILITY STUDIES
FIXED INVESTMENT
FOREIGN EXCHANGE
FOREIGN FIRMS
FOREIGN INVESTMENT
FOREIGN INVESTMENTS
FORESTRY
HUMAN
spellingShingle CAPITAL GOODS
COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGE
EXPORT DEVELOPMENT
TECHNOLOGICAL CAPACITYACCOUNTING
AFFILIATES
AGRICULTURE
ALLOCATIVE EFFICIENCY
BANK OF KOREA
BANKING SYSTEM
CAPITAL ACCUMULATION
CAPITAL FORMATION
CAPITAL GOODS
CHEMICAL INDUSTRY
COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGE
CONSULTING SERVICES
CONTRACTORS
CREDIT RATIONING
DEBT
DEVELOPMENT STRATEGY
DIVISION OF LABOR
DOMESTIC DEMAND
DOMESTIC MARKET
ECONOMIC ACTIVITY
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
ECONOMIC GROWTH
ECONOMIES OF SCALE
EFFECTIVE USE
ENGINEERING SERVICES
ENGINEERS
EXPENDITURES
EXPORT GROWTH
EXPORT INCENTIVES
EXPORT INDUSTRIES
EXPORT MARKETS
EXPORT PERFORMANCE
EXPORTERS
EXPORTS
FEASIBILITY STUDIES
FIXED INVESTMENT
FOREIGN EXCHANGE
FOREIGN FIRMS
FOREIGN INVESTMENT
FOREIGN INVESTMENTS
FORESTRY
HUMAN
World Bank
De-fragmenting Africa : Deepening Regional Trade Integration in Goods and Services
geographic_facet Africa
description This book is the result of an extensive agenda of analytical work on regional trade integration in Africa involving staff from various units of the Africa region of the World Bank. The aim of this volume is to provide the main messages from this work to a wide audience the private sector, civil society, key ministries, relevant agencies that is necessary to provide the consensus and broad base for successful implementation of reforms. Africa is not achieving its potential in regional trade. The contributions to this volume highlight the enormous scope for increased cross-border trade in Africa and the reasons why such opportunities are not being exploited. The main objective of this introductory chapter is to draw attention to the key reason why Africa's potential for regional trade remains unexploited: the high transaction costs that face those who trade across borders in Africa. The contributions to the volume discuss a wide range of policy related barriers that drive up costs and limit trade. The chapter starts with a review of recent export performance in Africa, noting the strong growth rates in many countries. However, the impact of such growth on employment and poverty has been much muted and important challenges remain, especially with regard to greater diversification of exports, and it is here that effective regional integration that reduces transaction costs can play a key role. The paper then discusses the key barriers that raise costs for traders and continue to fragment the African market. Finally, the paper ends with some specific recommendations for action that policy makers can take at the regional level to support integrated markets in Africa and discusses how the World Bank and other donors can support those wishing to implement the necessary reforms.
format Economic & Sector Work :: Development Policy Review (DPR)
author World Bank
author_facet World Bank
author_sort World Bank
title De-fragmenting Africa : Deepening Regional Trade Integration in Goods and Services
title_short De-fragmenting Africa : Deepening Regional Trade Integration in Goods and Services
title_full De-fragmenting Africa : Deepening Regional Trade Integration in Goods and Services
title_fullStr De-fragmenting Africa : Deepening Regional Trade Integration in Goods and Services
title_full_unstemmed De-fragmenting Africa : Deepening Regional Trade Integration in Goods and Services
title_sort de-fragmenting africa : deepening regional trade integration in goods and services
publisher Washington, DC
publishDate 2013
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2012/01/16252822/de-fragmenting-africa-deepening-regional-trade-integration-goods-services
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/12385
_version_ 1764419720168079360