News Tag: Uganda

EU and African trading bloc seal agreement on regional trade

The European Union (EU) has signed a financing agreement with Africa’s largest trading bloc, COMESA, to enhance trade cooperation, according to a press release on Wednesday. The agreement was signed by EU Ambassador to Zambia and Representative to COMESA Alessandro Mariani and the Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa (COMESA)’s secretary-general Sindiso Ngwenya. The financing agreement involves a total of 68 million euros (76 million U.S. dollars) to fund the implementation of two programs aimed at reducing the cost of doing business among member countries of COMESA. According to the statement, the trade facilitation program was meant to reduce the cost of doing business and moving goods in the regional bloc and has identified five key priority areas for support. The five areas include monitoring and resolution of non-tariff barriers, implementation of the World Trade Organization trade facilitation agreement, coordinated border management and trade and transport facilitation along selected corridors and border posts. Source: Coastweek .

AFRICA NEEDS TO TAKE THE ISSUE OF INTRA-AFRICAN TRADE MORE SERIOUSLY FOR REAL PROSPERITY AND GROWTH

According to the DHL Global Connectedness Index, Africa is the world’s least connected continent, when considering the ease of moving people, trade, information and finance. All African countries need to focus on developing connectedness on the continent and building a good trade relationship. During the ongoing 2017 Africa Export-Import Bank Annual General Meeting, (AfreximAGM) taking place in Kigali, Rwanda, the President and Chairman of the Board of Directors, Afreximbank, Benedict Oramah and Claver Gatete, Minister for Finance and Economic Planning, Republic of Rwanda also spoke about Intra-African trade which is also part of the discussion for this year’s Annual General Meeting. Africa contributes about 15 percent to intra-African trade, which is very low when compared with other continents such as Asia and Europe with 50 percent and 70 percent respectively. Benedict Oramah highlighted what Afrexim is doing to boost intra-African trade. He revealed that Afrexim is trying to deal with the biggest constraint with intra-African trade, which is the knowledge of the market in other countries. The bank is also working on developing standards and certification programs. He also explained that Afrexim Intra-African trade is not just trade between African countries but also between Africans and Africans in the Diaspora. “We regard Africans in the Diaspora as the 55th African country,” said Benedict Oramah. So far, Rwanda is making headways in ensuring that it boosts intra-African trade in the East African Region and the entire continent. The country has taken a number of laudable steps to ensure that this is achieved. According...

Uganda pledges 80pc of transit goods to SGR trains

Kenya’s Standard Gauge Railway (SGR) has received a major boost after Uganda committed to ferry construction materials and bulky transit goods through its networks. The two states have agreed that the Naivasha-Malaba and Malaba-Kampala will be executed by Chinese contractors in 42 months. “The Republic of Uganda has committed to ensure that at least 80 per cent of all cargo destined for Uganda will be transported by the SGR. The details of the mechanisms will be discussed,” the two states said in joint statement. To the operator of SGR section, the statement offers another veil of protection after the Kenya Ports Authority also declared a policy to initially reserve 40 per cent of its cargo for fast trains. The two governments said 60 per cent of rail inputs will be shipped in from China with up to 40 per cent of quota being reserved for local companies in the two countries. Kenya’s technical team will provide assistance as well as train Ugandan technicians and other workers on SGR construction technology. Transport Secretary James Macharia said Kenya was keen to extend the SGR facility to Malaba since Uganda had committed to channeling 80 per cent of their export and imported goods via SGR. Mr Macharia spoke last week when he led top ministry officials to Uganda for an inter-governmental meeting on the planned SGR extension project. His Uganda counterpart, Ms Monica Aruba, said Kampala was committed to implementing the project which will be jointly funded by China’s export and Import Bank...

Kenya commits to SGR reaching Malaba

The construction of the Ugandan stretch of the Standard Gauge Railway (SGR) has been the subject of speculation with talk implying that Kenya will only stop in Kisumu. Kisumu is about 100Kms from the Kenya – Uganda border town of Malaba. Kenya is about to clinch financing for the Naivasha-Kisumu link. There has been speculation that Kenya will only stop at this point. However, Mr James Macharia, the Kenyan Cabinet Secretary for Works insists that Kenya has no intention of terminating the SGR in Kisumu. “We’ve agreed that we need to sit with the financiers and have these joint commitments that we’ve agreed upon. That way, the issue of a hanging railway – Kampala to Malaba or Nairobi to Kisumu – will be no more. It will be a joint seamless connected railway. We must synchronise the completion of the project. In terms of viability, we see it as one project - A to Z -, initially being Mombasa to Kampala,” he told reporters last week. Last week, the SGR cluster of the Northern Corridor Infrastructure Projects (NCIP) met in Kampala and on the sidelines, the Works ministers for Uganda and Kenya issued a joint statement on the project. The financiers of the project, EXIM Bank of China, are said to only be considering granting Kenya more financing for to Kisumu, only if there is a commitment to reach Malaba. “The commercial contract up to Naivasha has been signed but the application has not yet gone to China. Once that...

We can produce competitive products – EABC chairperson

As you take on the mantle, what key areas are you focusing on to ease doing business in the region? One of the issues I want to look at is harmonising domestic taxes and free movement of persons. We want to see Ugandan workers, Tanzanian workers or Burundian workers seeking temporary employment crossing the borders to any of the member states freely. But this has not been happening and it is inhibiting the principles of the Common Market which seeks for free movement of services, free movement of persons and free movement of capital. But we also want to see the EAC partner states harmonise the laws to control illicit trade in the region. The laws are taking long yet we want them to be done very fast to improve trade in the region. Illicit trade has continued to affect industrial growth in the region going by substandard and counterfeit goods and products clogging our market. What is stalling these processes? The East African Community (EAC) is an independent organ and we have no capacity to push them to do things according to the speed of the private sector. Private sector is profit oriented and we want to see things done yesterday, not or tomorrow. We are now involving Heads of State in the challenges we are facing in doing business so that decisions are made quickly. How are you going to boost intra-regional trade as a Council? I am glad to mention that intra-regional trade is booming among the...

Agoa Row Is Wake Up Call On Agriculture

In recent days, the big story in the East African region has been the US threat to withdraw export benefits enjoyed by Tanzania, Kenya, Rwanda and Burundi through what is popularly known as Agoa. Agoa is the acronym for "African Growth and Opportunity Act", backed by a law passed in 2000 in the US to provide a window in which tax-free products would be exported to the US domestic market from Agoa qualifying countries in Africa, including those in our East African Community bloc. For countries which fully utilised the opportunity, Agoa benefits have been immense. Kenya, for example, has so created nearly 70,000 Agoa-related jobs and in 2016, it exported to the US products valued at Sh867 billion, eight times more than the combined exports of Sh100 billion by Tanzania, Rwanda and Burundi. The Agoa Act has thus been a signature trade deal between the US and African fledgling economies. With another extension of the benefits in the last term of President Obama's presidency, the Agoa deal was expected to continue. But now things are changing. A powerful US trade lobby group wants Agoa benefits for EAC withdrawn and have petitioned President Donald Trump to kick the EAC out of the arrangement. The lobby group is targeting Tanzania, Rwanda and Burundi because of their decision to phase out importation of second hand clothes and shoes. Kenya is spared because it has rescinded on the EAC agreement to ban "mitumba" or impose huge taxes on such imports. The US lobby...

Overall East African Container Trade Expands Over First Quarter, Despite Contrary Corridor Performance

In line with what was reported last year, there continues to be a noticeable disparity in performance between the two core trade corridors of East Africa. Container trade in the Northern Corridor, which serves Kenya, Uganda, South Sudan and parts of Rwanda, expanded by 1%, whereas the Central Corridor, serving Tanzania, parts of Rwanda, Burundi, Zambia, Malawi and DRC, saw a contraction of 12%. This is according to Steve Felder, Managing Director at Maersk Line Eastern Africa – a member of A.P. Moller–Maersk – who says the 2017 First Quarter East Africa Trade Report issued by the company reveals that aggregate trade levels in the region have improved slightly since 2016, resulting in overall year-on-year growth of 1%. “While conditions in the East Africa region have continued to be challenging due to political instability, ongoing macro-economic headwinds and drought conditions affecting certain countries, we’re seeing healthy competition between the two corridors, both fighting for position in terms of some of the ‘swing’ countries that could export or import cargo through either corridor, specifically Rwanda, Burundi, Uganda.” The Northern Corridor While the Northern Corridor (serving Kenya, Uganda, South Sudan, and parts of Rwanda) import market experienced year-on-year growth of 6% in the first quarter, it declined slightly (by 1%) from the last quarter of 2016, says Felder. “In Kenya, liquidity is still very tight, caused by last year’s interest rate capping on the bank lending rate. In the next quarter we are expecting to see a slowdown in the import market...

Call for African Market Niches, Harnessing Neighbouring Bloc

Ethiopia's move and interaction on the economic fronts has not been as anticipated as its contribution and influence on the continent politics and peace building efforts, scholars argue. Scholars argue that owing to the ever growing economy of the county and market the country need to focus on Africa market as well, according to a report filed by Addis Zemen daily. According to 2016 African Development Bank Report, Benin, Botswana, Côte d'Ivoire and Senegal are the leading countries for their market supply to other African countries. Ethiopia and other African countries have the lowest share in this regard. Africa's GDP has reached over 5.8 trillion USD, registering on average five per cent growth and predicts to reach 29 trillion USD by 2050. The same report indicated that the African foreign trade volume has grown by 200 per cent. Having such growth and market potential, the share of Ethiopia is very much limited, according to scholars. Jimma University Economics Lecturer Dr.Wondaferahu Mulugeta said Ethiopia's trade relations with African countries is very much low. He attributed similar products, lack of infrastructure connectivity with African countries to the reason for low level of the trade relations. According to him, industrial parks and agro processing factories are expanding. The FDI is also increasing. The government is also working to be hub of the light and medium manufacturing in 2025. He said against this backdrop the African market would be essential for Ethiopia in the coming couple of years. President of the Pan African Chamber...

East African leaders urged to help end Burundi stalemate

The East African Community (EAC) leaders were on Tuesday urged to pool together and initiate dialogue with the Burundi leaders to end the stalemate in the country. Deo Hakizimana, President of the Independent Centre for Research and Initiatives for Dialogue (CIRID), a Geneva-based civil society organization, called on leaders of the regional bloc to work together to solve the stalemate through dialogue to save citizens from suffering. "The EAC is a respected strong bloc hence the need for the leaders in the region to strongly come out and engage the Burundian leadership and the opposition in solving the long standing misunderstanding in the country," Hakizimana said in Nairobi during the launch of Macky Sall Prize for Dialogue in Africa (PMSDA) in Kenya. The tiny central African nation has been in the midst of a political crisis since President Pierre Nkurunziza decided to run for a controversial third term earlier in April 2015. Since then several people have been killed, with the toll possibly considerably higher, and 250,000 have fled to neighbouring States with many others internally displaced. The UN has warned of a relapse into full-fledged civil war, calling the government to take all necessary steps to disarm pro-government militias and bring operations of the police, intelligence services and other security forces under the mantle of the law. The Burundi diplomat, who has been involved in peace initiatives, said that Africa is not rich in resources alone but has a wide range of bright people that could help solve internal...

Clues to DfID’s economic plans emerge with post-Brexit trade

The U.K. government unveiled plans over the weekend to replicate current European Union-negotiated trade terms with the poorest 48 countries after it leaves the bloc, signaling the first major milestone for Secretary of State for International Development Priti Patel’s pledge to put post-Brexit trade at the center of her department’s new economic development strategy. The announcement commits to maintaining the current quota-free, duty-free trade access to the British market currently enjoyed by the poorest 48 countries through the EU. The government also announced it intends to maintain current trade advantages for other developing countries and, in some cases, to “explore options to expand relationships,” although specific terms can only be announced after bilateral negotiations. The news falls in line with the Department for International Development's new economic development strategy, released in January, as well as its cross-government strategy, which commits to spending 30 percent of U.K. aid through departments other than DfID by 2020. It will likely mean a greater emphasis on some of the work DfID is doing around trade facilitation and through the CDC, the U.K.’s development finance institution, a DfID official told Devex. Rachel Turner, director-general of economic development at DfID, said the primary objective behind the announcement is to provide continuity for current and potential investors in the region. She emphasized some of the new strategies DfID is considering to promote better access to global markets. About 20 billion pounds ($25 billion) worth of goods are exported to the U.K. from developing countries every year, according to government statistics. “We...