The daily Star, AFP, January 22, 2013
RIYADH:
Arab leaders pledged to remove obstacles to finalising a free trade zone this
year and agreed to facilitate capital flows, as they wrapped up an economic
summit in Riyadh on Tuesday.
"We
stress our determination to complete all the prerequisites of (forming) the
free trade area before the end of this year," Arab League chief Nabil
al-Arabi said at the end of the third Arab Economic and Social Summit.
The
leaders, he added, were determined to clear obstacles to "achieve the Arab
customs union fully by 2015."
Saudi
Finance Minister Ibrahim al-Assaf said officials working to facilitate a
customs union were struggling to sort out rules on the origin of goods.
"We
still have problems with the issue of country of origin... in order to
establish which goods are from Arab countries and the percentage of foreign
components," he told reporters.
The
regulations of the customs union stipulate that exempted goods should have at
least 40 percent local components.
Meanwhile,
Arab leaders agreed amendments proposed to strengthen the flow of capital and
investments between countries, Arabi said.
The Arab
League leader's assistant for economic affairs, Mohammed al-Tuwaijri, had
described investment laws in Arab countries as a "repellent for
investments".
He also
highlighted "significant deficiencies" in the 1980 common agreement
over capital movement.
Foreign
direct investment inflow dropped from $68.7 billion in 2010 to $43 billion in
2011, a year that saw a wave of Arab Spring uprisings hitting several Arab
nations.

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