The deal, to be signed in Egypt, is intended to ease the movement of
goods across member countries which represent more than half the
continent's GDP.

Since the end of colonial rule, governments have been discussing ways to boost intra-African trade.
The poor state of roads, railways and airlines have made it difficult.
Three existing trade blocs - the Southern African Development
Community (Sadc); the East African Community (EAC) and the Common Market
for Eastern and Southern Africa (Comesa) - are to to be united into a
single new zone.
The pact - known as the The Tripartite Free Trade
Area (TFTA) - will then be officially unveiled at the upcoming summit
of the African Union this weekend in South Africa.

Africa Business Report's Lerato Mbele says the idea behind it is to
remove trade barriers on most goods, making them cheaper, and
stimulating $1tn (£648bn) worth of economic activity across the region
of more than 600 million people.
However, concluding the deal in
Egypt will merely be the first step and it will need to be approved by
each country's parliament, before the wheels are set in motion, she
says.
It is hoped that this will happen by 2017.
'Extremely exciting'
Analysts
says countries within a free-trade zone agree to reduce or do away with
certain trade barriers within that area, but still pursue their own
trade policies when it comes to outside countries.
Kenyan
academic Calestous Juma said the move was "extremely exciting" for the
continent as, once implemented, trade within Africa would increase to
30% from 12%.
"By having larger markets, it signals the possibility of being able to manufacture products at a scale that is cost-effective.
"For
example, where you need large-scale investments like $200m to create a
pharmaceutical factory, you couldn't do that if you were only selling
the products in one country."
He said the consolidation of financing would be another benefit of the TFTA.
"As
soon as banks notice that they can lend to larger investors, say in
manufacturing, that will lead to the liberalisation of the financing
sector, greater access to finance and more investors coming to Africa."
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