British High Commissioner to Kenya Jane Marriott. FILE PHOTO | NMG
Kenya will trade with the UK under the current preferential
terms only up to December 31, Britain has said, just one week after its
official exit from the European Union (EU).
From
January, the trade arrangement will have to shift to the terms agreed
under a new deal that the UK hopes to conclude with the East African
Community bloc this year.
"Kenya will continue to trade
with the UK on the same terms as it does now until December 31, 2020.
During this transition period, the UK will engage the EAC to secure a
trade agreement, which will ensure duty and quota-free access to the UK
in the long term,” a British High Commission spokesperson said in
response to the Business Daily queries.
Britain was
the fifth biggest destination of Kenyan goods in the period to November
last year behind Uganda (Sh49.36 billion), the United States (Sh46.4
billion), the Netherlands (Sh42 billion) and Pakistan, which stood at
fourth place after importing Kenyan goods worth Sh41.1 billion.
The
UK High Commission’s comments came as Kenyan business leaders remained
cautiously optimistic about deeper economic ties with the UK after it
formally detached itself from the EU last Friday.
President Uhuru Kenyatta met with Prime Minister Boris Johnson
in London during the recent UK-Africa Investment Summit, and agreed the
Kenya-UK Strategic Partnership.
Mutual Prosperity is
one of the five pillars of the partnership, and ensuring trade thrives
between our nations will be a priority going forwards," the UK High
Commission in Nairobi said.
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