Ghana petitions ECOWAS over illegal Benin tariffs
Ghanaian firms halt exports to Benin

Ghana petitions ECOWAS over illegal Benin tariffs

Ghana has petitioned the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) over the imposition of a duty regime by the Government of Benin (GoB) targeted at goods from Anglophone West Africa.

The country is of the view that the duty regime, which took effect seven months ago, had presented an unfair advantage to companies operating from Francophone West Africa that still benefited from duty and quota-free on exports in Benin.

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Consequently, Ghanaian manufacturers that are into the exports of plastic pipes, paints, aluminium products, cooking oil, among other products have halted exports to the Benin market until further notice.

The GRAPHIC BUSINESS learnt that the affected manufacturers, led by the Ghana National Chamber of Commerce and Industry (GNCCI) reported the situation to the Ministry of Trade and Industry (MoTI) and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Regional Integration (MoFARI).

However, after several attempts to solve the issue at country-to-country level failed, the country petitioned the ECOWAS Commission for an immediate solution, multiple sources at both MoTI and MoFARI told the paper on March 5.

Context

According to Article 3 of the Revised ECOWAS Treaty, one of the main objectives of ECOWAS is to promote the economic integration of the region by establishing, among other things, a Free Trade Area (FTA).

The instrument created for this purpose is the ECOWAS Trade Liberalisation Scheme (ETLS).

The ETLS is a tool which aims at the operationalisation of the Free Trade Area. Its mechanism ensures the free movement of originating products without the payment of customs duties and taxes of equivalent effect on importation into ECOWAS Member States.

But, Benin since last year has withdrawn from the ETLS, introducing a new regime which affords it the liberty to charge duties and taxes on products from only Anglophone African countries while giving their counterparts from Francophone Member States the opportunity to operate under duty and quota free regime.

Chamber’s position

The Regional Manager of the Accra Chamber of Commerce and Industry, Mr Daniel Osei Torgbor, said so far about 10 member-manufacturers of the chamber suffered the unfair duty regime in Benin.

He observed that most of the affected firms have been outcompeted in that market as most of their partners abandon them for cheaper alternatives to maximise profit.

“An example is that one of our companies that exports cooking oil to countries in Africa have lost its Benin market to a company in Malaysia due to the new duty regime introduced by the GoB,” he said.

To help resolve the issue, he said the GNCCI has had several discussions with the MoTI and MoFARI but has still not made any headway regarding the export challenges.

Under the ETLS, the GNCCI is the organisation mandated to issue certificates of origin for exports of goods to ECOWAS Member States.

20 per cent duty

The Managing Director (MD) of Interplast, Mr Hayssam Fakhry, said his company has also been affected by the new regime with 20 per cent duty slapped on its products.

According to him, the issue needed to be settled within the shortest possible time to help save the operations of many firms that have positioned themselves in Ghana to serve other West African countries.

The MD observed that Ghanaian firms were losing clients and businesses to Francophone countries and if the matter was not fixed swiftly, it would be difficult to get them back.

“All Ghanaian manufacturers are now not able to export to Benin under the duty-free regime following the decision to charge duties on products from Anglophone countries which is against the ECOWAS protocols,” he said.

 

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