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Asymmetrical power relations: a legal analysis of the European Union and Economic Community of West African States Economic Partnership Agreement

Preparatory to the Economic Partnership Agreements (EPAs) negotiation, the former European Union Trade Commissioner, Peter Mandelson, declares that African countries have the right to benefit from their own comparative advantage. He further stated that the EPAs would, inevitably, herald the end of t...

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Main Author: Agbo-Ejeh, Christiana I
Other Authors: Ismail, Faizel
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Commercial Law 2023
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access_status_str Open Access
author Agbo-Ejeh, Christiana I
author2 Ismail, Faizel
author_browse Agbo-Ejeh, Christiana I
Ismail, Faizel
author_facet Ismail, Faizel
Agbo-Ejeh, Christiana I
author_sort Agbo-Ejeh, Christiana I
collection Thesis
description Preparatory to the Economic Partnership Agreements (EPAs) negotiation, the former European Union Trade Commissioner, Peter Mandelson, declares that African countries have the right to benefit from their own comparative advantage. He further stated that the EPAs would, inevitably, herald the end of the colonial ideological construct of the previous trading system and usher in mutually beneficial economic development. However, as negotiated between the EU and ECOWAS, the EPA reflects a ‘systemic' asymmetry originating in colonialism to a certain extent. This thesis argued that just as the GATT advanced a structure of trade liberalisation and trade laws that perpetuate asymmetry in favour of the developed countries, the EU-African Caribbean and Pacific (ACP) countries EPAs, which promote free trade, are likely to continue the asymmetry between the EU-ACP countries and the EU-ECOWAS in particular. In order to gather in-depth insights into the EU-ECOWAS Economic Partnership Agreement, empirical evidence was used to triangulate between primary and secondary sources, mainly in chapters five to seven of this thesis for analysis. This method involved interviews in ECOWA with Commission, Ministries in Ghana, Nigeria and archival documents obtained from organisations. The approach offers an effective means to gain insights into the real issues canvassed by the opponents of the EPA and the current impasse in the trade relationship between the two regions. Ghana and Nigeria are employed as case studies for the EU's trade relations with West Africa. The study finds that the special and differential treatment provisions in the EU-Ghana EPA text are insufficient to support the economic development of Ghana. Although power asymmetry permeates relations between Nigeria and the EU, it does not necessarily determine that the outcome of these interactions will always favour the EU. It also finds that Nigeria is not as dependent as Ghana on the EU for its trade and investment relations because the former exports oil to the EU tax free. Moreover, Nigeria's trade and economic strategies are to strengthen its bilateral trade and investment relationship with the United Kingdom post-Brexit. The thesis concludes that notwithstanding that the proponents of the EPAs stated that the objective of the EPAs would be to promote free trade and economic development of the ACP countries; the conduct of the EU in the negotiations, the textual interpretation of GATT Article XXIV and the text of the agreements indicate that the EU-ECOWAS EPA is likely to reinforce asymmetry in the trade relationship between it and countries that signed the agreements.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:38:04.102Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2023
publishDateRange 2023
publishDateSort 2023
publisher Department of Commercial Law
publisherStr Department of Commercial Law
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/37003 Asymmetrical power relations: a legal analysis of the European Union and Economic Community of West African States Economic Partnership Agreement Agbo-Ejeh, Christiana I Ismail, Faizel Ordor, Ada Commercial Law Preparatory to the Economic Partnership Agreements (EPAs) negotiation, the former European Union Trade Commissioner, Peter Mandelson, declares that African countries have the right to benefit from their own comparative advantage. He further stated that the EPAs would, inevitably, herald the end of the colonial ideological construct of the previous trading system and usher in mutually beneficial economic development. However, as negotiated between the EU and ECOWAS, the EPA reflects a ‘systemic' asymmetry originating in colonialism to a certain extent. This thesis argued that just as the GATT advanced a structure of trade liberalisation and trade laws that perpetuate asymmetry in favour of the developed countries, the EU-African Caribbean and Pacific (ACP) countries EPAs, which promote free trade, are likely to continue the asymmetry between the EU-ACP countries and the EU-ECOWAS in particular. In order to gather in-depth insights into the EU-ECOWAS Economic Partnership Agreement, empirical evidence was used to triangulate between primary and secondary sources, mainly in chapters five to seven of this thesis for analysis. This method involved interviews in ECOWA with Commission, Ministries in Ghana, Nigeria and archival documents obtained from organisations. The approach offers an effective means to gain insights into the real issues canvassed by the opponents of the EPA and the current impasse in the trade relationship between the two regions. Ghana and Nigeria are employed as case studies for the EU's trade relations with West Africa. The study finds that the special and differential treatment provisions in the EU-Ghana EPA text are insufficient to support the economic development of Ghana. Although power asymmetry permeates relations between Nigeria and the EU, it does not necessarily determine that the outcome of these interactions will always favour the EU. It also finds that Nigeria is not as dependent as Ghana on the EU for its trade and investment relations because the former exports oil to the EU tax free. Moreover, Nigeria's trade and economic strategies are to strengthen its bilateral trade and investment relationship with the United Kingdom post-Brexit. The thesis concludes that notwithstanding that the proponents of the EPAs stated that the objective of the EPAs would be to promote free trade and economic development of the ACP countries; the conduct of the EU in the negotiations, the textual interpretation of GATT Article XXIV and the text of the agreements indicate that the EU-ECOWAS EPA is likely to reinforce asymmetry in the trade relationship between it and countries that signed the agreements. 2023-02-23T09:13:58Z 2023-02-23T09:13:58Z 2022 2023-02-20T12:10:05Z Doctoral Thesis Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/37003 eng application/pdf Department of Commercial Law Faculty of Law
spellingShingle Commercial Law
Agbo-Ejeh, Christiana I
Asymmetrical power relations: a legal analysis of the European Union and Economic Community of West African States Economic Partnership Agreement
thesis_degree_str Doctoral
title Asymmetrical power relations: a legal analysis of the European Union and Economic Community of West African States Economic Partnership Agreement
title_full Asymmetrical power relations: a legal analysis of the European Union and Economic Community of West African States Economic Partnership Agreement
title_fullStr Asymmetrical power relations: a legal analysis of the European Union and Economic Community of West African States Economic Partnership Agreement
title_full_unstemmed Asymmetrical power relations: a legal analysis of the European Union and Economic Community of West African States Economic Partnership Agreement
title_short Asymmetrical power relations: a legal analysis of the European Union and Economic Community of West African States Economic Partnership Agreement
title_sort asymmetrical power relations a legal analysis of the european union and economic community of west african states economic partnership agreement
topic Commercial Law
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/37003
work_keys_str_mv AT agboejehchristianai asymmetricalpowerrelationsalegalanalysisoftheeuropeanunionandeconomiccommunityofwestafricanstateseconomicpartnershipagreement