Economic Partnership Agreement between ECOWAS-EU in Relation to the Principle of Economic Duress
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Date
2024-10-17
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IFE Business Law Review
Abstract
The nexus between international cooperation and economic relations among states cannot be over emphasized. It is,
therefore, imperative for mechanisms to be put in place to safeguard the interest of all states irrespective of the region
individual States belong. To break the monolith of the dominant powers of a party during negotiations with a weak
party can create a new capacity and close the sharp developmental divide between poor and rich countries. This paper
argued that the principle of economic duress be incorporated into WTO Law. This argument is based on the fact that
the WTO regulates Regional Trade Area extensively, it has the apparatus to incorporate a principle of law to regulate
the conduct of countries engaged in Regional Trade Area negotiations. As Cass suggested, it is important for the
trading system to represent the viewpoint of the political community1and in the context of this paper, to ensure that
weak members are legally protected from undue economic pressure. It is believed that members who signed the
Economic Partnership Agreements were coerced by the EU, which relied on its dominant powers and influence over
some members. West Africa for instance, depends on the EU for trade and financial aid. Due to the inadequacies of
the WTO rules, there is a need to formulate a revised system of rules that comprehensively protects the developing
countries. Negotiations resulting in reciprocal agreements will in the short and long terms harm the developmental
objectives which the EU claims to pursue for ACP countries. The article explores the EU and Africa, Caribbean and
Pacific countries’ agreements, with a particular focus on article 49 of the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaty in
the context of WTO’s legal capacity to regulate regional trade to answer the question if the WTO can incorporate the
principle of economic duress to regulate bilateral trade negotiations to better protect the interests of all parties,
especially the developing countries.
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Keywords
Economic, duress, Partnership, Agreement, EU, Africa, RTA, trade WTO, ACP and countries
Citation
Agbo-Ejeh, Inebu C. (2024). Economic Partnership Agreement between ECOWAS-EU in Relation to the Principle of Economic Duress. IFE Business Law Review, 4.