The American Apparel and Footwear Association
(AAFA) is urging the US Trade Representative (USTR) to renew the African Growth
and Opportunity Act (AGOA) for at least another ten years, noting as companies
are poised to diversify out of China, Africa is a logical place for many of
them.
In a letter to William Shpiece, chair of the Trade
Policy Staff Committee for USTR, Beth Hughes, vice president of trade and
customs policy for the AAFA, says if AGOA were to be renewed this year for at
least another ten years, companies would have the necessary certainty and
timeframe they need to grow a vertical, responsible, and competitive industry
in Africa up to and past 2025.
She notes even though the AGOA expiration date is three years away, US
investment in the region already faces mounting uncertainty.
“Companies are poised to diversify out of China, and Africa is a logical
place for many of them. The on-again, off-again nature of the programme before
the ten-year renewal was extremely disruptive and meant the industry was not
able to take full advantage of the first 15 years of the programme. The ten-year
renewal, with state-of-the-art rules of origin, in 2015 was an important first
step but was not nearly long enough – as we repeatedly noted in 2015 – to
sustain the kind of long-term trade and investment that is needed to alter
centuries of underdevelopment,” Hughes says.
“As more companies are beginning to utilise AGOA, and specifically the
third-country fabric provision, the quota fill rate will be significantly
increasing in the coming years. Therefore, we also suggest raising the existing
3.5% limit to at least 4.5%, with a growth provision, so that it not be a
constraint going forward.”
Hughes also points to Ethiopia, which lost its AGOA benefits
on 1 January following the humanitarian crisis in Tigray and nearby
regions.
“We
understand that some progress has been made on the benchmarks outlined in an
official letter sent to Ethiopia late last year. We are hopeful that the
Ethiopian Government continues to make progress and meet all of the benchmarks
in order to reinstate their AGOA benefits as soon as possible,” Hughes says.
“Our companies are committed to Ethiopia and their workers. However, if
Ethiopia cannot regain their benefits, the costs to do business there will
eventually become too great for many.”
By Just Style