The East Africa Community (EAC), comprised of Burundi, Kenya, Rwanda, Tanzania, and Uganda, is one of the leading regional economic organizations in sub-Saharan Africa and has made great strides in recent years toward integrating the economies of its partner states. It has established a free trade area and a customs union, and is working toward a common market. THE U.S.-EAC COOPERATION AGREEMENT The U.S.-EAC Cooperation Agreement on Trade Facilitation, SPS, and TBT commits both the EAC and the United States to three objectives: IMPLEMENT THE WTO's TRADE FACILITATION AGREEMENT - The Agreement commits the parties to cooperate on customs issues, including the implementation of the World Trade Organization (WTO) Trade Facilitation Agreement, reducing red tape and unnecessary formalities at borders decreasing border release times, and implementing other positive reforms laid out in the WTO Trade Facilitation Agreement to help streamline and facilitate trade. This will build on the EAC's own work on customs reforms, which have resulted in substantial reductions in the time and costs of moving goods across borders within the EAC. For instance, container transit times from Mombasa, Kenya, to Kigali, Rwanda have declined from 21 days several years ago to six days, while associated transport costs are down by over $1,700 per container. ENHANCING FOOD SAFETY, PLANT AND ANIMAL HEALTH - The Agreement provides for U.S.-EAC cooperation and capacity building related to food safety and animal and plant health standards. While a majority of the region's people are involved in agricultural production or processing, the export potential...
East Africa: Fact Sheet On U.S.-East African Community Cooperation Agreement
Posted on: March 4, 2015
Posted on: March 4, 2015