Analysis
The **AfCFTA’s stated objectives**—industrialization, job creation, and shared prosperity—are explicitly outlined in its founding documents (e.g., the 2018 Kigali Agreement) and supported by economic projections (e.g., World Bank, UNECA). However, **removing non-tariff barriers** (e.g., customs delays, regulatory divergence) and **infrastructure investment** remain **works in progress**, with implementation lagging behind ambitions. For example, only ~40% of AfCFTA tariff lines were liberalized by 2023 (AfCFTA Secretariat), and intra-African trade still faces logistical bottlenecks (AfDB 2023 *African Economic Outlook*). Songwe’s framing is **directionally correct** but overstates the agreement’s *current* impact.
Background
Launched in 2021, the **AfCFTA** aims to create a single market of 1.3 billion people, boosting intra-African trade (currently ~15% of total trade, vs. 60%+ in Europe/Asia). Proponents argue it could lift **30–50 million Africans out of poverty** by 2035 (World Bank 2020), but critics highlight **structural challenges**, including weak regional supply chains and political fragmentation. Songwe, then-Executive Secretary of **UNECA**, was a key AfCFTA advocate, reflecting institutional optimism.
Verdict summary
Vera Songwe’s claim about the **AfCFTA’s goals** is broadly accurate, but its **success conditions** (non-tariff barriers, infrastructure) are aspirational and not yet fully realized as of 2024.