Trading & Financial News
No Result
View All Result
Monday, October 20, 2025
  • Login
  • Economy
  • Markets
  • Forex News
  • Investing
  • Stock Trading
  • Crypto
  • Trading for beginners
Subscribe
Trading & Financial News
  • Economy
  • Markets
  • Forex News
  • Investing
  • Stock Trading
  • Crypto
  • Trading for beginners
No Result
View All Result
Trading & Financial News
No Result
View All Result
Home Economy

US businesses look beyond AGOA to rebuild Africa trade ties

by Tradinghow
October 20, 2025
in Economy
A A
0
US businesses look beyond AGOA to rebuild Africa trade ties
152
SHARES
1.9k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter


Business leaders, investors and trade advisers at the Global Africa Summit in Washington DC said they are adapting to shifting US trade priorities under President Donald Trump, describing both challenges and new opportunities for US-Africa economic relations in an era of increasing tariffs and trade tensions.

The summit took place against the expiry of the African Growth and Opportunity Act (AGOA) – which grants duty-free access for dozens of African countries to the United States.

The 25-year old law expired on September 30, although reports suggest a one-year extension is still being considered by the Trump administration.

Trump has also hiked tariffs on African countries, and his administration has yet to set a date for the US–Africa Leaders Summit, the flagship diplomatic forum launched by President Barack Obama in 2014 and hosted again by President Joe Biden in 2022.

Global Africa Summit organiser Jane Osei, head of the African Investment Network, said the event sought to sustain dialogue amid tightening US visa rules and a more inward-looking US.

“Under this administration, access to the US market has become harder for African entrepreneurs,” she said. “But interest remains high – investors are exploring diaspora-led capital and local partnerships to keep trade flowing.”

Osei added that the administration’s rollback of aid programs, including USAID, had forced a reckoning on the continent.

“Africa has learned to stand on its own two feet,” she said. “We can no longer rely solely on aid or external support. We are learning to industrialise, to create jobs, to innovate. That independence is the opportunity within the challenge.”

Shaquana Teasely, chief executive of Intentional Trade Advisors said there is still plenty of potential to develop trade ties between the US and the continent.

“Although AGOA has not been fully renewed, there are still customs programmes that benefit African suppliers and US importers.”

“I’m advising clients to rethink how they do business – to diversify, to use other trade mechanisms, and to stay compliant. There are still advantages if you know how to navigate them.”

Teasely said her firm has helped clients recover “over $30m in Chinese trade-war tariffs” using lesser-known customs programmes.

Looking beyond AGOA

The actual impact of AGOA continues to be debated.

A recent report from the International Trade Centre (ITC) said that Africa’s apparel and textile manufacturers will be hardest hit by AGOA’s expiry. Across all sectors, US tariff introduced in 2025 are estimated to reduce projected exports of AGOA beneficiaries by about 8% by 2029. The expiry of AGOA adds a further decline of 0.6 percentage points, or $189m, the ITC projected. $138m of that will be accounted for by reductions in exports of apparel and textile products to the US.

But Charles De Bow, president of the National Black Chamber of Commerce, said AGOA’s design had failed to meet its development goals.

“AGOA was intended to help Africa develop,” he said. “But in many cases, it ended up doing the opposite – allowing foreign companies to relocate production to the continent, claim African origin, and then sell duty-free into the US market. Those goods weren’t always made by Africans or benefiting African-owned firms. It created competition, not capacity.”

Former US Commerce Department official Terri Batch, now with Global LA, said that criticism has long been voiced inside trade circles.

“If you ask who really benefited from AGOA, it was the big companies – the Walmarts, the multinationals that understand how it works,” she said.

“Small and medium-sized African businesses don’t know how to leverage it, how to quantify products, or even how to qualify. I remember asking African ministers how many companies actually use AGOA, and for a whole country it might be five. It never fulfilled its promise.”

Despite the policy uncertainty, Batch said investors have an opportunity to adapt.

“Businesses always find a way,” she said. “If Washington steps back, it creates space for entrepreneurs and diaspora investors to step forward. Africa is the future – and it’s in America’s interest to stay in the game.”



Source link

https://primexbt.investments/start_trading/?cxd=459_549985&pid=459&promo=[afp7]&type=IB https://primexbt.investments/start_trading/?cxd=459_549985&pid=459&promo=[afp7]&type=IB https://primexbt.investments/start_trading/?cxd=459_549985&pid=459&promo=[afp7]&type=IB
  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
The Evolving International Cannabis Landscape

The Evolving International Cannabis Landscape

March 20, 2024
Uniswap Launches Permissionless Bridging Across 9 Networks

Uniswap Launches Permissionless Bridging Across 9 Networks

October 24, 2024
UK Faces Two Decades of No Earnings Growth and More Austerity

UK Faces Two Decades of No Earnings Growth and More Austerity

July 29, 2023
China tech groups lead multibillion-dollar campaign to help exporters sell at home

China tech groups lead multibillion-dollar campaign to help exporters sell at home

April 20, 2025
High Street Retailers Pin Hopes On Discount Splurge In Black Friday Fever

High Street Retailers Pin Hopes On Discount Splurge In Black Friday Fever

0
UK Faces Two Decades of No Earnings Growth and More Austerity

UK Faces Two Decades of No Earnings Growth and More Austerity

0
Learn how to trade. For beginners

Learn how to trade. For beginners

0
Trading for beginners

Trading for beginners

0
US businesses look beyond AGOA to rebuild Africa trade ties

US businesses look beyond AGOA to rebuild Africa trade ties

October 20, 2025
Global trends, FPIs move, Q2 earnings to guide markets in holiday-shortened week: Analysts

Global trends, FPIs move, Q2 earnings to guide markets in holiday-shortened week: Analysts

October 20, 2025
South Africa revives nuclear reactor project in new energy plan

South Africa revives nuclear reactor project in new energy plan

October 20, 2025
Are You Investing in a Fad or a Future Market Leader?

Are You Investing in a Fad or a Future Market Leader?

October 19, 2025

Recent News

US businesses look beyond AGOA to rebuild Africa trade ties

US businesses look beyond AGOA to rebuild Africa trade ties

October 20, 2025
Global trends, FPIs move, Q2 earnings to guide markets in holiday-shortened week: Analysts

Global trends, FPIs move, Q2 earnings to guide markets in holiday-shortened week: Analysts

October 20, 2025

Categories

  • Business
  • Crypto
  • Economy
  • Forex News
  • Investing
  • Markets
  • More
  • Stock Trading
  • Trading for beginners

Site Navigation

  • Home
  • Contact Us
  • Stock Trading
  • Markets
  • Investing
  • Other Links
  • Privacy & Policy
Trading & Financial News

We bring you the fastest breaking news on Trading, forex, and finance submitted from credible and reliable news sources around the world.

© 2019-2025 Tradinghow is your trusted hub for forex news, online trading insights, and financial market analysis. www.tradinghow.com

No Result
View All Result
  • Contact Us
  • Home
  • Economy
  • Crypto
  • Investing
  • Markets
  • Forex News
  • Stock Trading

© 2019-2025 Tradinghow is your trusted hub for forex news, online trading insights, and financial market analysis. www.tradinghow.com

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In