News Tag: Tanzania

New website to enhance trade in East Africa

TradeMark Africa (TMA) has unveiled a web-portal that will contain crucial information on trade and markets in the region. The web-portal, www.trademarkea.com, is a one-stop centre on information in trade, markets and integration. Speaking during the unveiling ceremony in Nairobi, Kenya, on Monday, TradeMark Africa (TMA) Chief Executive Frank Matsaert said the communications tool will enhance accessibility of information to all the East Africa citizens. "For the last four years that we have been in operation, a lot has been achieved. Various projects and measures have been undertaken to improve and enhance trade in the East Africa region. We have documented some of the best practices in form of case studies which we have shared on our new website," said Matsaert. Recently, TradeMark Africa (TMA), in partnership with key stakeholders drawn from government agencies, private sector and interested parties, kicked off a Northern Corridor Performance Dashboard, a software that captures live data and transmits it. The tool captures critical information such as ship-waiting time, vessel turnaround time, and cargo dwell time. This information is available for anyone to see, hence the agencies are able to pinpoint the barrier to trade. TradeMark Africa (TMA) has invested $53 million in the port corridor rehabilitation to strengthen infrastructure, improve productivity and create an enabling institutional framework. Besides the Performance Dash Board, in partnership with Kenya Trade Network Agency (KenTrade), a new single window system was unveiled to document all import/export transactions so that they can be accessed by all parties. Matsaert said TradeMark...

Will new rail-roads transform Africa’s economic landscape?

Railroad investment is taking off around the African continent, including a Chinese-financed $5.2 billion project linking Nairobi and Mombasa. The line will eventually link the port city with South Sudan, the Democratic Republic of Congo, and Burundi. Nigeria, Tanzania, and other countries have also undertaken massive railroad expansion and rehabilitation projects in the past years in an effort to improve infrastructure and spur economic development. Broadly speaking, infrastructure has been shown to have positive impacts on “income growth and, more tentatively, on distributive equality,” according to a World Bank review paper on the subject. Researchers Remi Jedwab and Alexander Moradi of George Washington University and the University of Sussex, respectively, also found that “modern transportation technology can produce economic change in poor countries by reducing trade costs, integrating markets, and facilitating the circulation of ideas.” In poor or remote regions with higher costs to trade, Jedwab and Moradi conclude that transportation could “permit increased commercialization of agriculture, start an urbanization process, and lay out the foundations of future industrialization.” That means that African countries could truly benefit from rail expansion, especially considering the lack of infrastructure currently in place. Paul Collier, economics professor and director of the Centre for the Study of African Economies at Oxford University, noted in a 2011 article for the IMF that “Nigeria, home to one-fifth of the population of sub-Saharan Africa and one of its most densely populated countries, has but one kilometer of rail for every 262 square kilometers [of land].” By comparison, the...

Export trade talks with EU collapse

UNCERTAINTY has gripped fresh produce exporters after trade talks between the East African Community and the European Commission over the long dragging economic partnership agreement temporarily stalled. The draft agreement signed by the five EAC member states on September 20, was last week rejected by the EU team. [caption id="attachment_4017" align="alignleft" width="300"] ANXIETY: Workers at the Oserian flower farm on May 15. The Kenya Flower Council says the country may lose out to Ethiopia, Ecuador and Colombia[/caption] The move has sent Kenya, which had taken upon herself to lobby the rest of the EAC countries and further seek consensus with the EU in a bid to expedite the conclusion of the talks, back to the drawing board. EU's resident Trade and Communications counsellor Christophe De Vroey yesterday said there is no scheduled meeting between the two parties after the “EAC text” was turned down by the EU negotiators. “The text that was signed by the (EAC) council was not accepted, but we are looking for another meeting in the next few weeks,” De Vroey told the Star on the phone. Kenya yesterday became the only African country to lose out on the duty and quota-free market access to the 28-member EU, following the deadlock over the labourious EPA negotiations. This is because the rest of the EAC countries – Tanzania, Uganda, Rwanda and Burundi – are cushioned through Everything-But-Arms trade agreement for least developed countries. Other African countries exporting to the EU are also safe from higher taxation regime after...

Europe ‘Awol’ from decisive EAC meeting on trade accord

The East African Community's (EAC) last-minute efforts to have negotiations of the contentious Economic Partnership Agreement (EPA) concluded before today's deadline were dealt a huge blow after European Union (EU) delegates failed to turn up for a decisive meeting in Nairobi last week. The EU Director-General of Trade was supposed to lead a delegation to Nairobi to attend what had initially been tipped to be "the last round of negotiation" in which the proposed trade pact would finally be initialised before final ratification by the EAC ministers of trade. The meeting was supposed to last four days, from September 23 to 26. Sources have intimated to The New Times that the 'boycott' was a last-minute development that left the EAC delegation of high ranking government officials surprised. "To be honest, I don't know why they didn't turn up; they didn't communicate to us," Peter Kiguta, director-general of customs and trade at the EAC Secretariat, told The New Times by telephone. Emmanuel Hategeka, the permanent secretary in the Ministry of Trade and Industry, who was part of Rwanda's delegation to the negotiations, also said he was surprised by the EU team's absence. Before the meeting, permanent secretaries of trade ministries, who formed EAC's delegation, had high hopes that the meetings would finally bring years of negotiations to a conclusion and even had slim hopes of having the deal signed before deadline. Now all that is shuttered. "I think you can now say that we will indeed miss the deadline, that's for...

Trade unions clamour for free movement of workers within EAC

ARUSHA, TANZANIA: Trade unions in the region have called for enabling of workers to move freely and reside within East Africa Community states in a bid to address unemployment. Speaking in Arusha Tuesday, Chairman the East African Trade Union Confederation ( EATUC) Francis said enabling workers to move freely and work anywhere within the region remained the critical first step in addressing unemployment problems and spreading the benefit of spreading skilled labour among partner states. Atwoli urged individual unions from Kenya, Tanzania (mainaland), Zanzibar and Uganda to commit to ensuring that many hindrances to labour mobility are overcome. The EATUC chairman faulted EAC’s Common Market protocol ratified in 2010 for restricting free movement of labour within the region. “The protocol prohibits students from other partner states from engaging in employment in the host country except internships and industrial attachment which is against the principle of non-discrimination.” Atwoli said. EATUC said it will lobby EAC summit, which brings together all presidents of member states with a hope that the community will implement its request. Source: Standard Digital

Firms get licences to open shop at EPZ

Thirteen local and foreign companies have been allowed to start operations at the Export Processing Zone in Tanzania. According to Economic Processing Zone Authority director-general Dr Adelhelm Meru, once the operations start, about 2,346 jobs will be created and $78.35 million will be generated in the first year. Investors have completed the required procedures and have been given licences to start production, he said. Dr Meru said the companies will invest in various areas, which include meat processing and packaging, horticulture, cashew nuts production. Foreign companies that have been awarded licences are from India, Germany and Holland. The EPZA started the total sales turnover is about $746 million for all the 128 companies. Dr Meru said the entry of new investors is expected to boost Tanzania’s exports and increase the country’s foreign exchange earnings. It is also projected that by June next year two to three new investors would start production. Over the past five years, Tanzania has generated Tsh675 billion ($450 million) net profit from goods exported from Special Economic Zones (SEZs). Category of companies The companies have been categorised in three groups based on percentage of ownership with local investors leading at 44 per cent. According to Dr Meru, foreign companies constitute 41 per cent investments in SEZ, while the last category which is composed of both local and foreign joint investments has 15 per cent. EPZ data shows that over Tsh1 trillion ($700 million) worth of investments have created 14,000 direct jobs with over Tsh700 billion ($450...

EAC ministers lobby for softer landing for Kenyan exports to European Union

East Africa is making last-ditch efforts to save Kenyan exporters from incurring losses of more than $140 million a year following failure to broker a trade deal that would have allowed continued free access to the European Union market. East African Community (EAC) ministers who met in Arusha, Tanzania, on September 20 agreed to push for a meeting with their EU counterparts, possibly before the September 30 deadline, to discuss the latter’s new proposals. Top on the agenda is to convince the EU to prepare a legal instrument to enable a smooth transition of Kenya’s exports from the duty-free regime of the Market Access Regulation (MAR) to the Generalised System of Preferences (GSP) regime. “We want the EU to prepare paper work to enable us go to the GSP. We must lobby for Kenya to be put in that GSP category. This is because it is not practical for the two teams to ratify EPA (Economic Partnership Agreement) by Tuesday (September 30). So we need a document that will enable us to be included in the GSP category so that business continues smoothly,” said Kenya’s Principal Secretary Karanja Kibicho, who is EAC’s negotiation team leader. Although Kenya’s exports to the EU will no longer enjoy duty-free, quota-free access to the EU market until the EPA is ratified by the two trade blocs, products under the EU-GSP tariff are subjected to lower taxation than those under the normal EU tariff. Fresh roses and cut flowers, for instance, would attract import duty...

EAC external trade deficit gap could be narrowed with EU pact

Trading with the European Union (EU) as a regional bloc will enable East African Community (EAC) states reduce on their external trade deficit, Amb. Valentine Rugwabiza, the Minister for EAC affairs, has said. Amb. Rugwabiza was explaining the benefits of the long-awaited EAC-EU trade pact to the regional economies. Over the weekend, EAC partner states reached a consensus on the contentious clauses in the Economic Partnership Agreement with the EU. This, the minister said, allows them to embark on the final negotiations with the EU which started in 2007. "The bilateral trade agreement will allow favourable tax regimes, guarantee market access for goods from both blocs, enable technology transfer to the region, create value-addition for products and services, and create jobs," she told journalists in Kigali yesterday. Rugwabiza noted that the region's low export earnings were mainly as a result of the low production levels of goods and services, high costs of exporting and the high quality standard levels required by European markets. "This pact will enable us diversify the level of exports, undertake the EAC infrastructure projects in order to lower transport costs, and gauge how much to invest in order for our businesses to be able to meet EU quality standards," she said. The EU has for long been a good market for products and services from EAC and the reverse is also true. In the first half of this year, Rwanda's total exports increased by 1.2 per cent in value to $ 293.53 million (Rwf202 billion) from...

Business lobby urges removal of barriers to EAC trade

A regional business lobby has called on the East African Community (EAC) secretariat and its member states to address the challenges that are crippling trade within the bloc. The East African Business Council (EABC), an apex organisation of the business community in the region, through its chairman Felix Mosha said this during this year’s annual Secretary-General’s forum in Entebbe, Uganda. “Some of these challenges include, the low pace of implementation of the EAC common market protocol and harmonisation of laws and policies in the region,” said Mr Mosha in a statement read on his behalf by an EABC board member John Bosco Rusagara. The East African Common Market Protocol, established in 2010, provides for the free movement of goods, labour, services, and capital, meant to boost trade and investments in the region. The chairman noted that work permits were still highly priced, with heavy paperwork involved which in the end makes the process long and tedious. Mr Mosha remarked that new non-tariff barriers (NTBs) were now cropping up as the region is grappling to eliminate the old ones. EAC Secretary-General Richard Sezibera also echoed the same sentiments at the forum. “To date, 55 NTBs have been resolved, 22 remain unresolved and six newly identified,” Mr Sezibera remarked. READ: Non-tariff barriers: Case of one step forward, two steps back for region Other challenges facing the region include the portability of the social security benefits within the EAC common market. “There is a challenge of food security and climate change mitigation and...

Trade talks must be concluded quickly

Trade negotiations are not an easy task given the high stakes involved in safeguarding the interests of parties involved. Considering the long-term nature of most trade pacts, it is critical that parties involved in the process agree on the most favourable terms so as to avoid the pain of loss and mistrust. For almost a decade Kenya and other East African Community countries have been buried in talks with the European Union for a new trade deal to replace the current one where developing countries are granted preferential market access for their goods. Unfortunately, the deadline for the talks has lapsed before the EU and the EAC could conclude an Economic Partnership Agreement (EPA). This means that trade between the two blocs will from October 1 enter a higher tax bracket because a successful deal on EPA would have accorded them duty-free, quota-free access to European markets. The gravity of this matter is reflected by the fact that Kenyan exporters now face taxes of about Sh100 million every week until such a time that the two blocs shall conclude and a sign a new trade deal. This situation is rather unfortunate for Kenyan exporters who are already faced with rising cost of production. The new taxes are expected to make Kenyan goods even more expensive to EU citizens, hence impacting on sales volumes and in turn reducing foreign exchange inflows to the country. While we appreciate the efforts by Kenya and other EAC countries in finding the most favourable deals...