President of African Organisation for Standardisation, ARSO, Dr.
Joseph Odumodu, has reiterated the need for the establishment of
Africa’s Continental Free Trade Area, CFTA, in view of its potential of
boosting trade within the region by 30 percent.
He recalled that the essence of the free trade area was to become one
common market as obtained in European Union and Latin American markets.
The ARSO chief pointed out that sub-regional countries required
quality infrastructure such as accredited laboratories, metrology
laboratories, effective quality policy, among others to compete
favourably in the global economic system.
Odumodu, who is also the Director General, Standards Organisation of
Nigeria, SON, urged African leaders to devolve substantial part of their
national budgets to support development of key quality infrastructure
in the region.
While recalling that African leaders had in 2012 in Addis-Ababa,
Ethiopia established the CFTA as a strategic initiative, he said that
the initiative was aimed at ensuring Africa’s common trade market by the
year 2017.
He charged African governments through Ministries of
Industrialization, Trade and Commerce to ensure they achieve the desired
goals by 2017.
‘’Lack of proper funding and paucity of funds have greatly affected
the campaign against dumping and counterfeiting. African Union, AU, has
given a marching order to ARSO to use standards to improve trade through
harmonization of standards across the continent while collapsing all
boundaries, depending on the agreement of African Union Heads of
State’’, he stated.
Odumodu explained that the organization was committed to improving
Africa’s economic sector, especially by making trade more profitable and
globally competitive.
According to him, agriculture and agricultural trade are major
sources of income for African countries, stressing that “the expansion
of agricultural trade has helped to provide greater quantity, wider
variety.
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