File Photo (USTR)
August 8, 2013
Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
“The Future of U.S.-Africa Trade and Economic Cooperation”
“Good morning. Welcome ministers and ambassadors, legislators and
Members of Congress, private sector and civil society leaders, ladies
and gentlemen. It is my great honor to be back for the AGOA Forum.
Last year in Washington, I had the opportunity to share with you
President Obama’s new U.S. Strategy toward Sub-Saharan Africa.
President Obama’s Strategy for Sub-Saharan Africa
“The Presidential Policy Directive (PPD) that we announced then calls
for increased trade and investment to form a key pillar of strengthened
partnerships between the United States and Africa. The PPD reflects
our conviction that to achieve sustainable development in Africa and
around the world, we need trade, not just aid; investment, not just
assistance.
“And over the past twelve months, we’ve taken concrete steps to put
this strategy into practice. Last summer, I was fortunate enough to
lead a delegation of senior officials from across the U.S. Government to
Dar es Salaam, Nairobi, Abuja, and here in Addis. At each stop, we
engaged with government, business, and community leaders to gather
first-hand knowledge about trading conditions in Africa. We visited
ports and power plants; we had discussions with small business owners
and managers of major corporate subsidiaries. We heard about
frustrations with red tape, roadblocks, and redundant border procedures.
We saw how inadequate infrastructure and a lack of affordable, readily
available energy resources are limiting the pace of Africa’s growth.
And we came away from that trip with fresh new ideas about the kind of
comprehensive, market-oriented solutions Africa needs to adopt to become
the ‘emerging emerging’ markets that can join the engines of global
growth in the coming years."
Our strategy goes beyond traditional aid and assistance. We’re focused on mobilizing trade and investment.
“At the Camp David G-8 Summit last summer, President Obama announced
the launch of the New Alliance for Food Security and Nutrition, which
aims to achieve sustained and inclusive agricultural growth and raise 50
million people out of poverty over the next 10 years. The New Alliance
has already mobilized more than $4 billion in private sector
investments and more than $1 billion in NGO commitments to African
agriculture in the member countries. These are not just philanthropic
donations or expressions of corporate social responsibility, but
hard-headed, for-profit, risk-adjusted, return-oriented investments.
And the program is growing because investors see real promise in Africa.
The New Alliance has expanded from three countries to nine with more,
like Senegal, poised to join this year.
Trade Africa
“When President Obama returned to the continent in June, he
underscored the centrality of trade and investment as the drivers of
strengthened ties between us. In Tanzania, the President announced the
launch of Trade Africa, a new partnership between the United States and
Africa that seeks to increase internal and regional trade within Africa,
and expand trade and economic ties between Africa, the United States,
and other global markets. While the East African Community (EAC) will
be a preliminary focus of this strategy, we will also seek to work with
other regional economic communities in Africa, and ultimately to support
your efforts to create a continent-wide, integrated free trade area.
Power Africa
“At the Ubongo power plant in Tanzania, President Obama announced the
launch of Power Africa, a new initiative to help Africa leverage its
vast resources to meet its energy needs and increase its global
competitiveness. Right now, more than two-thirds of the population of
sub-Saharan Africa is without reliable access to electricity and more
than 85 percent of the rural population lacks access. And yet the
region is also discovering vast reserves of oil and gas as well as a
significant potential to develop clean geothermal, hydro, wind and solar
energy. Through Power Africa, we will work with those African
governments that are willing and ready to make the reforms in their
energy and power sectors to attract private investment and to ensure
that energy resources are responsibly developed and effectively
deployed.
“And of course, these initiatives are vital complements to AGOA,
which remains at the heart of our strategy for increasing U.S.-Africa
trade and investment.
AGOA: Shared Successes, Lessons Learned
“Let me take a few minutes now to review where we are and where we
have been with AGOA. Looking back, we can see that at a time when
Africa’s rise was far less clear, AGOA predicted that Africa would have
enormous economic potential, and that it would be in the United States’
national interest to help African countries use trade as an engine for
Africa’s economic growth.
“Thirteen years later, reports by the African Development Bank, World
Bank, and other prominent economic institutions highlight Africa’s
substantial growth and rising position in the global economy. AGOA
foresaw the strong economic growth that we currently see in Africa and
the remarkable shift from Africa being seen mostly as a destination for
development assistance to one where we can have a real conversation
about achieving sustainable economic growth through private sector trade
and investment.
“Without a doubt, AGOA has truly transformed the way the United
States and Africa interact on trade and economic issues. Since 2001,
U.S. total trade with sub-Saharan Africa (exports plus imports) have
grown more than 250 percent from $28.2 billion in 2001, the first full
year of AGOA trade, to $72.3 billion in 2012. AGOA imports (including
GSP) to the United States have climbed to $34.9 billion in 2012, more
than four times the amount in 2001. U.S. exports to sub-Saharan Africa
have more than tripled under AGOA from $6.9 billion in 2001 to $22.6
billion in 2012, as Africa’s growing middle class is increasingly able
to buy high-quality products Made in America, and as African businesses
have sought more and more U.S. inputs, expertise, and partnerships.
“To be sure, petroleum products still account for the largest portion
of AGOA imports. However, we have also seen important steps toward
product diversification and value-added trade under AGOA. Last year,
non-oil AGOA trade totaled $4.8 billion, more than triple the amount in
2001. Several non-oil sectors experienced sizable increases during this
period, including vehicles and parts ($2.0 billion in 2012 compared to
$289 million in 2001), apparel ($815 million in 2012; $359 million in
2001), and fruits and nuts ($121 million in 2012; $29.4 million in
2001).
“Behind the billions of dollars in exports generated by AGOA, are
hundreds of thousands of new jobs that have helped African men and
especially women to support their families in ways that once seemed
impossible. Countless African workers whose jobs depend on AGOA are now
able to purchase goods and services that were previously beyond their
means. On the ground, in more and more countries, entrepreneurs are
finding paths to prosperity – and stability for their families and
communities – through exports.
“By providing new market opportunities for African exports,
especially of non-traditional and value-added products, AGOA has helped
African firms become more competitive both in the United States and
internationally. Many African businesses that had never previously
considered the U.S. market are attending trade shows and getting orders
for everything from Ugandan organic cotton T-shirts to Mauritian seafood
and Ghanaian cocoa powder.
“African leaders have recognized the meaningful difference that AGOA
makes for households and businesses across the continent. We’ve seen
positive developments at the country level. And this would not have
happened without the commitment of many African leaders to improve
governance, to mobilize domestic resources behind improving their health
and educational systems and to engage in the type of reforms that are
necessary to create an enabling environment for private sector
development.
“Forward-thinking African leaders are seeking new investors,
especially American investors. They like the fact that when American
companies invest, they hire, train and promote local staff, they invest
in the communities and they’re focused not just on taking resources out
of the continent, but investing in the human resources of the continent
as well. And American investors are beginning to take up the challenge.
They’re investing in Africa and they’re investing in Africans – $39.5
billion in U.S. FDI in sub-Saharan Africa by the latest figures. In
line with AGOA’s original vision, these rising trade and investment
figures have translated into good jobs and higher incomes for both
American and African workers, demonstrating that increased U.S. trade
with Africa is having a tangible impact on both sides of the Atlantic.
AGOA’s Future
“This is all good news. But of course, we are not satisfied yet.
ahead to AGOA’s future, we must define precisely where we are trying to
go, as well as the best ways to get there. President Obama has made
clear that we seek a ‘seamless’ renewal of AGOA before it expires in
2015, and we will work in partnership with stakeholders, in the U.S. and
Africa, and especially with Congress, to achieve that objective.
“But renewal of AGOA is more than a matter of timing. It is also a
matter of substance. Much has changed since 2000. In the global
economy. In the pattern of trading relationships. In modes of
production and the development of global value chains.
U.S. Trade Policy Responds to New Realities
“We’ve seen the rise of emerging economies, which led us to call at
the Pittsburgh Summit for the institutionalization of the G-20 as the
premier forum for international economic cooperation. We’ve seen
deadlock in the Doha negotiations, which led us to forge a consensus to
pursue “fresh and credible” approaches to reinvigorate the WTO,
including negotiations on trade facilitation, services, and information
technology trade. We’ve seen the emergence of the Asia-Pacific as one
of the most dynamic regions of the world and launched the Trans-Pacific
Partnership negotiations to raise the bar, introduce new disciplines –
including in areas such as state-owned enterprises and the digital
economy – to set the standards for ambitious 21st Century trade
agreements.
“And looking to our broadest and deepest economic relationship, we
launched the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership
negotiations, with an unprecedented focus on bridging the differences
between the U.S. and European regulatory and standards regimes.
Laying the Foundation for AGOA 2.0
“We are doing things differently around the world, and Africa
deserves the same thoughtful, innovative thinking we have given the rest
of our trading partners. We need to lay the foundation for AGOA 2.0,
informed by the lessons of the past thirteen years, reflecting the
changes in the global trading system, and driven by the ideas of today
and tomorrow. That process begins today. And it begins here.
Review the Record
“First, we should start with what we know about AGOA and our other
policy successes. Let’s inventory where exports are growing and why.
Let’s understand which non-commodity exports have the greatest
potential, which are or can be part of dynamic global value chains. How
can AGOA foster their growth? What can be done to increase and
diversify AGOA utilization?
On the Africa side, does every AGOA-eligible country have a current,
active AGOA export strategy? Right now, only 10-12 percent of
sub-Saharan African trade is intraregional trade. Is each country
implementing commitments within its regional economic community and
working to realize the Tripartite and continental free trade vision led
by the African Union? How can AGOA promote regional integration and
hence, spur diversification?
On the U.S. side, can we better leverage technical assistance and
“aid for trade” through initiatives like the Partnership for Growth, the
Millennium Challenge Corporation compacts, Power Africa and Trade
Africa, restructured regional trade hubs, and through greater
coordination with Africa’s other bilateral partners and multilateral
institutions? How can we use these tools to increase AGOA utilization
and to address the issues beyond AGOA which damage Africa’s
competitiveness?
Discuss Specifics
“Second, let’s get specific. We should drill down into the thousands
of duty-free tariff lines under AGOA and ask if they are appropriate for
eligible exporters. We will be frank about our sensitivities, and I’ll
expect the same candor from you. But in that exchange, let’s ask which
AGOA countries should qualify to export certain products and why?
Should there be graduation, for sectors or for countries? How should we
treat African export sectors that are globally competitive, versus those
just starting out?
“We know that tariffs are only the beginning of the story. Between
AGOA and GSP, virtually all exports from least-developed countries in
sub-Saharan Africa are eligible to enter the U.S. market duty free, but
there are a range of other factors that affect the ability of African
firms and farms to provide goods in the quantity and the quality and at a
price that makes Africa competitive. We will want to hear your
thoughts on rules of origin, science-based regulatory measures and other
issues that affect exporters. We will want to talk about why the costs
of getting goods to market are higher here than anywhere else in the
world and what we can do, through trade facilitation, customs
harmonization, infrastructure development and other measures to address
that. And we should think through country eligibility criteria in the
context of Africa’s development, and better understand their role in
fostering democracy, improved governance and lasting economic reform.
Learn from Trading Partners
“Third, let’s look beyond the U.S.-Africa relationship and learn from
other countries. What lessons can African countries take from
development success stories and trade strategies in Asia and Latin
America? What can we learn from your experience with new trade and
investment partners, such as China and other emerging economies? What
can we learn from your trade relationships with the European Union and
its Member States, from the EU’s preference programs, and from your
ongoing negotiations of Economic Partnership Agreements? How do we
think about AGOA in the context of two-way, reciprocal trade agreements?
As we think about renewing AGOA, we certainly do not want U.S. firms
to be put at a competitive disadvantage in the rapidly growing and
dynamic African market.
Look Forward to Future Growth Together
“Fourth, let’s look to the future. AGOA was never intended to be a
permanent preference program, nor should it be. So let’s ask how AGOA
can be a better stepladder to Africa’s further growth, development and
global economic integration. As we learn more about global production
and global value chains, where should Africa fit in the future? How can
AGOA help promote greater value-added production in Africa? How can we
work together to avoid bad policies and common pitfalls, like rigid
localization requirements that serve as barriers to trade and hinder the
development of competitive industries?
Build Bilateral Relationships and Strengthen Multilateral Priorities
“Finally, looking to the future, how do we capitalize on our
bilateral relationship to strengthen multilateral priorities, such as
concluding a trade facilitation agreement that will benefit developing
countries even more than developed ones and that can help build momentum
for further multilateral trade liberalization?
Launching a Consultative Process with Open Minds
“These are just some of the questions we should begin to discuss
today, tomorrow, and in the months ahead. In Washington, USTR will lead
a process to review AGOA and gain insight from all of AGOA’s
stakeholders. We will reach out to you – African government leaders,
U.S. and African companies, experts in civil society, NGOs and
academics. Ultimately, of course, this will be an issue for the U.S.
Congress to take up, and we look forward to working in partnership with
them to determine the best way forward. At the end, it is very possible
that we will conclude that AGOA should just be renewed as is, but we go
into this process with an open mind and look forward to a robust and
insightful review.
President Obama’s Continuing Commitment to Africa
“Let me conclude by underscoring the Obama Administration’s
commitment to Africa. This is my third trip to the continent in just
over a year. And over the course of the next year or so, you can expect
to see Secretary of Commerce Penny Pritzker, Secretary of Energy Ernie
Moniz and Secretary of Treasury Jack Lew, among others, here, working to
deepen our economic ties. As President Obama said in Johannesburg: You
have “no better friend and partner than the United States of America.”
And when the President convenes African leaders in Washington in 2014,
I look forward to reporting back on our plans for AGOA renewal and,
beyond that, a clear vision of the future of U.S.-African economic
relations.
“This Forum and the launch of the AGOA review today are key steps in
that process. Thank you for your engagement. Thank you for your
commitment. Thank you for your partnership.”
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