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Trade Facilitation, Border Management, and the Harmonisation of Policies Across AfCFTA Member States

Alouis Chilunjika ()
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Alouis Chilunjika: National University of Lesotho, Department of Political and Administrative Studies

Chapter Chapter 17 in From Policy to Practice: Challenges and Ways Forward on the Implementation of the AfCFTA, 2026, pp 373-398 from Springer

Abstract: Abstract This chapter explores the ways that the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) promotes regional integration through trade facilitation, modernisation of border administration, and policy harmonisation. Despite advancements, the full potential of intracontinental trade is still hampered by procedural and structural trade restrictions. Drawing on case studies of national reforms and empirical data from the Regional Economic Communities (RECs), this chapter emphasises how Africa’s trade costs are two to three times higher than those of developed regions due to ineffective border procedures. Three important conclusions are drawn. First, customs efficiency has increased, and clearance times have decreased because of the implementation of digital border technology such as computerised single window systems. Second, policy fragmentation still exists, particularly with regard to rules of origin and tariff regimes. Third, enforcement and legal discrepancies arise from institutional misalignments between national REC commitments and AfCFTA objectives. These consist of inadequate compliance procedures and overlapping regulations. To promote a more cohesive and effective African trade environment, the chapter suggests setting up regional trade tribunals for uniform rule enforcement, accelerating Phase II AfCFTA negotiations on intellectual property, investment, and competition, and implementing digital trade protocols at the REC level to improve certification and customs interoperability.

Keywords: Trade; Trade facilitation; Border management; Policy harmonisation; African continental free trade area; Member states (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2026
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:spr:sprchp:978-3-032-14051-7_17

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DOI: 10.1007/978-3-032-14051-7_17

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