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Relief for Kenya as Tanzania signs EU trade deal

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Relief for Kenya as Tanzania signs EU trade deal

Relief for Kenya as Tanzania signs EU trade deal
A worker packs flowers for export. The EU began to impose taxes on Kenyan goods from October 1 after the EAC states breached EPAs deadlines, ending 30 years of preferential trade. Photo credit: Nation Media Group

Tanzania has endorsed a regional trade pact with the European Union, clearing the way for Kenyan products to regain duty free export access to Europe.

EU officials say the formal endorsement happened Thursday evening.

The move completes the Economic Partnership Agreements (EPAs) East African Community officials concluded with their EU counterparts this week after nearly one decade of grueling negotiations.

All members of the East African Community needed to sign the deal for it to be valid. Putting it into effect, however, could take up to half a year.

Beyond the elimination of customs duties, the agreement also covers issues such as free movement of goods, cooperation on customs and taxation, and trade defence instruments, which mirror EAC efforts to strengthen its customs union and set up an effective internal market.

Tanzanian delegates had requested more time to “consult” when Kenya, Uganda, Rwanda and Burundi signed the pact on Tuesday.

“I wish to advise that Tanzania initialled the EAC-EPA late evening yesterday in Brussels,” EU Delegation in Kenya’s trade counsellor Christophe De Vroey told the Business Daily. “Hopefully it will now not take too long for Kenya to come back to a duty-free quota-free access to the EU market”.

The EU has said it needs between three and six months to complete its internal procedures for reinstating Kenya to the preferential agreement.

Any delay could prove costly for Kenya, which is losing between Sh400 million and Sh1 billion a month under a harsher trade regime that kicked in when the deal was not concluded on time.

Since October 1, at least 87 per cent of Kenya’s exports to EU – equivalent to Sh98 billion according to last year’s trade figures – have been attracting tariffs ranging from five to 22 per cent to enter Europe. Among the key exports, cut flowers attract tariffs of 8.5 percent, fish six per cent while fruit juices from Kenya now cost 11.7 per cent more on the European shelves.

East African countries can now focus on improving their economic performance without worrying about the potential loss of full duty-free quota-free access to the European market, EU officials say.

“All EAC members, least developed or more advanced, will benefit from the same predictable and uniform trade scheme,” a statement put out Friday says.

“To comply with the rules of the World Trade Organisation, EAC countries committed to increase the share of their duty-free imports to 80 per cent over the coming 15 years. As EAC customs union tariffs on imports are already low, absorbing the EPA is a feasible endeavour. Also, when EAC countries will be ready to grant more far-reaching concessions to Europe’s main competitors, the EU will be able to claim those same improvements.”


Kenya’s push for EU trade deal shifts to lobbying MPs

Kenya’s push for a free trade deal with the European Union shifts to lobbying the political class after Tanzania became the last state to endorse the Economic Partnership Agreement (EPA) on Thursday.

While the EU says mere signing of EPA by five EAC states guarantees restoration of Kenya to the list of beneficiaries of its Market Access Regulation within the next six months, the hard part lies in rallying hostile MPs.

Even after regaining the duty-and-quota-free export status that Kenya lost on October 1, the deal finalised in Brussels last week will still have to be ratified by EAC’s national and regional legislative organs.

At home, Kenya is likely to face hostile MPs in the National Assembly who only last year passed a Motion that asked the government to abandon EPA talks altogether.

“I don’t want to comment on what the EAC states signed now because we haven’t seen its contents. But we’ll definitely reject a pact that does not address the concerns that we raised earlier,” said Ugenya MP David Ochieng’ who sits in parliamentary Regional Integration Committee.

Mr Ochieng’ seconded the Motion that deputy Speaker Joyce Laboso moved last year to ask developing states to reject EPAs and demand fresh terms for trade.

“We expect the Foreign Affairs and International Trade ministry to circulate the deal signed on Wednesday to all the relevant committees of the House for perusal before Parliament takes a stand,” he said.

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