Common market implementation in Africa could potentially alleviate poverty and grow economies. However, despite numerous trading blocs existing in Africa, challenges persist in common market implementation. This book investigates the enablers which could make an important difference, using the East African Community (EAC) as a case study.
Drawing on detailed analysis and extensive original research, this book considers the development of East African regional integration, which aims to foster collective economic advancement via the free movement of goods, people, capital, services, labour, and the rights of residence and establishment. It suggests that there are various enablers to integration which are often underutilised, such as funding models, public participation, regional decision-making models, anticorruption initiatives, common market laws, automated processes, sanction mechanisms, and research and information symmetry. The book argues that correctly harnessing these enablers would have a transformative impact both on the EAC and on other trading blocs in Africa, such as the SADC, ECOWAS, COMESA, and AfCFTA.
This book will be an important read for researchers and practitioners in international trade, regional integration, African development, and economics.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
List of figures
List of tables
Acknowledgements
Overview
Chapter 1: Introduction
Chapter 2: The Common Market Protocol
Chapter 3: The Common Market Implementation Framework
Chapter 4: Funding Model
Chapter 5: Public Participation
Chapter 6: The Region's Decision-Making Model
Chapter 7: Anticorruption
Chapter 8: Research and Information Symmetry
Chapter 9: Common Market Protocol Laws
Chapter 10: Sanction Mechanism
Chapter 11: Automated Processes
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index