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The Coordination Problem in Regional Integration

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Regional Integration, Trade and Industry in Africa
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Abstract

A catch-22 situation or coordination failure between the slow creation of well-integrated regional markets and low economic diversification (plus sophistication and specialization) is unfolding in Africa. Ubiquitous trade barriers translate into a paradoxical tariff pattern by which African neighbours are treated worse than remote trade partners. In the face of widespread irregularities and high trade costs, ‘trade facilitation’ has become an important technical approach to easing trade with the support of donor agencies. This chapter examines the systemic potential and limits of trade facilitation programmes. As a general alternative to institution-heavy, imperfect integration along the trodden linear path, ‘light integration’ is suggested in parts of the economic literature. The extent to which light integration can avoid the pitfalls of the classical approach is investigated. Dynamic effects are invoked as the last line of defence for the classical model of economic unions but remain contested, as trade research cannot empirically identify them in South-South RECs. The chapter concludes by asking what kind of new economic policy is required to effectively realize such dynamic effects. The answer is given in Part II.

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Notes

  1. 1.

    Real-world regional integration is not consistently rules-based, not even in Europe. It is significant that the EU customs union for merchandise trade has quickly become an orderly exercise, while for instance EU law on common fiscal policy is not strictly adhered to because the law (chiefly the 3% public deficit ceiling) would amount to pro-cyclical policy, which governments are recognizing as undesirable. Therefore, the contention above is clearly with regard to rules-based trade in goods.

  2. 2.

    This is probably different for travelling persons. To quote a source from the realm of culture, the film ‘Frontières’(Burkina Faso 2017, Director Apolline Traoré) describes the experience of women travellers on a bus itinerary from Dakar to Lagos—portraying customs, police and other ‘service’ agents at and behind the frontiers who invent all sorts of impediments, fees and violence—in fact: ‘non-political NTBs’. The travellers are outraged because they are well aware of the ECOWAS right to free movement of persons and recite it repeatedly to the customs agents. Alas, in vain.

  3. 3.

    For a more systematic treatment of the notional pair of ‘light’ versus ‘heavy’ integration in conjunction with ‘deep’ integration, see the beginning of Part III.

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Correspondence to Helmut Asche .

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Asche, H. (2021). The Coordination Problem in Regional Integration. In: Regional Integration, Trade and Industry in Africa. Advances in African Economic, Social and Political Development. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-75366-5_5

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