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The impact of the financial crises on trade and investment in ACP countries: A focus on SMEs Alberto PORTUGAL The World Bank.

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Presentation on theme: "The impact of the financial crises on trade and investment in ACP countries: A focus on SMEs Alberto PORTUGAL The World Bank."— Presentation transcript:

1 The impact of the financial crises on trade and investment in ACP countries: A focus on SMEs Alberto PORTUGAL The World Bank

2 Outline of the presentation 1. The impact of the crises on trade 2. The impact on investment 3. SMEs in times of crises 4. SMEs and the way forward: opening the discussion

3 1. The impact of the crises on trade: The Decline in Trade Now and Then.. Source: Freund (2009), World Bank Mean and medium of monthly trade growth : 4 previous global slowdowns episodes (1975, 1982, 1991, and 2001)

4 ACP exports growth to US, EU & Japan Constructed with quaterly moving average monthly series. Data collected by Trade Watch, World Bank

5 Breaking down ACP exports growth

6 2, The impact of the crises on investment Source: IMF, World Economic Outlook (WEO) FDI to Low Income Countries (LIC)

7 3. SMEs in the times of crises SMEs have suffered a dual shock as result of the financial and economic crises: 1. A drop in the demand for their goods and services 2. tightening in their access to finance. SMEs a significant role in all economies  key generators of employment and income  drivers of innovation and growth.  essential for the economic recovery.

8 4. SMEs and the way forward SME support programs to address firm- specific constraints :  access to finance  technology upgrading (and training to use new technology)  promotion of quality control  market development, network formation, and export promotion  skills development for workers

9 4. SMEs and the way forward Economy-wide policies :  Improve the Investment Climate Business Environment constraints adversely affect all enterprises, especially SMEs (WDR 2005) Regulatory reform Trade-enabling policies  Expand the benefits of trade to SMEs trough raising the prob. of entering foreign markets and exporting new products increasing export value of existing exporters  Effect on SMEs producing non-tradable intermediates and services

10 4. SMEs and the way forward Trade-enabling policies 1. Facilitating trade (~ policies to lower trade costs) i ) Investment in infrastructure (roads, rail, ports, airports, etc.) ii) Institutional reform (customs administration, transparency and corruption, regulatory environment)  Some findings: If Ethiopia improves logistics half-way to Mauritius’ level, exports would grow as if tariffs faced by Ethiopian exporters would be cut by 7.6% (Portugal-Perez and Wilson, 2009).  Reducing a day of delay in shipping increases trade by 1 percent + equivalent to 70 km. (Djankov, Freund and Pham, 09) 2. Market access (~ preferential trade agreements: EPAs, AGOA, etc.)

11 Summary The reduction in exports growth was more considerable for ACP countries than for other developing countries. FDI went down after reaching a peak before the crises. SMEs play a key role and are important for the economic recovery What are the best policy options to help them?

12 Appendix: Design of preferences matters: ex. rules of origin for African countries AGOA Source: de Melo and Portugal-Perez (2008)

13 Appendix: some facts on SMEs Although data is hard to obtain and compare, a few facts:  SMEs in Congo: ~80 % of firms <5 workers. 2 100 firms in the formal and 10 000 in the informal sector.  Nigerian SMEs ~95 % of formal manufacturing activity and 70 % industrial jobs.  South Africa: Micro and very small businesses >55 % employment and 22 % GDP in 2003. Small firms ~16 % (both) jobs and production and medium and large firms ~26 % jobs and 62 % production. Source: African Development Bank and OECD Development Centre, African Economic Outlook (2004-2005).


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