Africa announces start of free trade pact after years of talks



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Photographer: Issue Sanogo / AFP / Getty Images

The first goods will begin to flow under a free trade pact across Africa on Friday, the culmination of more than five years of negotiations on lowering cross-border tariffs.

The deal comes to fruition at a time when trade tensions are rising in much of the rest of the world. The 55-nation African Union will mark the occasion in a ceremony that comes just hours after the UK leaves the European Union’s single market and a new post-Brexit. The trade agreement enters into force.

Africa could be the world’s largest free trade zone by area when its treaty becomes fully operational by 2030. The bloc has a potential market of 1.2 billion people and a combined gross domestic product of $ 2.5 trillion.

The deal “will fundamentally change the economic fortunes of our continent,” South African President Cyril Ramaphosa, who holds the rotating presidency of the AU, said in a speech Thursday. “It is the beginning of a new era of trade between African countries, when the continent will produce the goods and services it needs, when its economies will grow, industrialize and diversify, when it will realize the great potential of its abundant natural resources. “

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