(Redirected from GAFTA)
GAFTA Members

Arab League members
As of
1 January 2005, the 'Greater Arab Free Trade Area' (also referred to as GAFTA) came into existence. GAFTA is a pact made by the
Arab League to achieve a complete Arab economic bloc that can compete internationally. GAFTA is relatively similar to
ASEAN.
The Project was adopted in the Arab League Summit of
Amman in 1997, with 17 Arab League members signing the pact, it is supervised and run by the Arab Economic Council in the Arab League. GAFTA has a high income, population, and area and has significant resources available.
GAFTA today
Members
Members:
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Flag of Palestine
Palestine
Possible future members:
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Progress
The Greater Arab Free Trade Area was a project adopted in 1997, when 17 Arab League members agreed on decreasing the customs on local production and to make an Arab
Free Zone for
exports and
imports between members.
The members participate in 96% of the total internal
Arab trade, and 95% with the rest of the world by applying the following conditions:
1-Instruct the inter-customs fees:
To reduce the Customs on Arab products by 10% annually, the 14 Arab states reported their custom tariff programs to the Security Council of the Arab League to coordinate them with each others, except for
Syria that is still using the
Brussels tariffs system.
2-Applying the locality of the Arab products:
All members have shared their standards and specifications to help their products move smoothly from one country to another.
The League also created a project to apply the Arab
Agriculture Pact:
which is to share the standards of the agricultural sector and inject several more restrictions and specifications where all members have involved in them.
The Arab league granted exceptions, which allow a customs rate for certain goods, to six members for several goods, however rejected requests by
Morocco,
Lebanon and
Jordan for additional exceptions.
3-Private sectors:
The League created a database and a service to inform and promote for the private's sectors benefits, and how there work would be in the GAFTA treaty is needed.
4-Communication:
The Arab Economic and Social Council in its 65th meeting agreed on pointing a base for communication to ease communication between member states, and also to work to ease communication between the Private and public sectors to apply the Greater Arab Free Trade Area between members.
5-Customs Duties:
In the 67th meeting the
Arab Economic and Social Council agreed that the 40% decrease on customs on goods in the past 4 years of the GAFTA will continue and following the decisions of the Amman Summit of the Arab League, the members will put more efforts to eliminate all customs duties on local Arab goods.
See also
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Arab League
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Arab Fund for Economic and Social Development
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Agadir Agreement
External links
★ http://www.arableagueonline.org/las/arabic/details_ar.jsp?art_id=124&level_id=110
★ http://www.amf.org.ae/venglish/