Politics and policy
By GERALD ANDAE, gandae@ke.nationmedia.com
In Summary
- Agoa programme allows Kenya and other Sub-Saharan African countries to export identified goods at preferential terms to the US, exempting them from paying tax.
- The rise in Agoa exports helped lift employment in Kenya’s export processing zones to 37,758 workers, up from 32,932 in 2013 and 24,114 in 2010.
- The Agoa initiative is expected to end this year after the initial deadline of September 2012 was extended by the US law makers.
Exports of duty free goods to the US under African
Growth and Opportunity Act (Agoa) increased by a quarter last year to
Sh30 billion, helping grow trade between Kenya and America.
The goods, mainly textile products, rose 24.2 per cent from
Sh24 billion in 2013 and accounted for 79 per cent of the total export
exports to the US—which was up 27.9 per cent to Sh38 billion.
The Agoa programme allows Kenya and other
Sub-Saharan African countries to export identified goods at preferential
terms to the US, exempting them from paying tax.
“There was a notable increase in the value of
export or articles of apparel to the US,” noted the Economic Survey that
was released Wednesday.
The rise in Agoa exports helped lift employment in
Kenya’s export processing zones to 37,758 workers, up from 32,932 in
2013 and 24,114 in 2010.
Other exports to the US included coffee, which
fetched Sh3 billion and titanium ores and concentrates earning the
country Sh2.1 billion.
The Agoa initiative is expected to end this year after the initial deadline of September 2012 was extended by the US law makers.
Supply
The extension of Agoa, commonly referred to as the
Third-Country-Rule, marked a major relief for players in the Kenyan
textile industry because it helped guarantee supply of raw material.
Textile firms in the country import close to 90 per
cent of the 180, 000 bales of raw cotton or semi-finished fabric that
they use to make garments for export to the US.
The government plans to set up a fully serviced
Textile City in the country as part of the ongoing efforts to revamp the
ailing textile industry that has suffered from lack of enough raw
material, following the collapse of the cotton sector.
The Textile City model championed by the Ministry
of Industrialisation and Enterprise Development aims to attract foreign
investors to set up manufacturing plants.
US-based global fashion houses Calvin Klein,
Timberland and Tommy Hilfiger are eyeing space in Kenya’s planned
Textile City, which will be set up in Athi River, with construction
expected to start in July.
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