The United States has advised African countries against banning the importation of used clothing, for them to continue benefiting from Africa Growth Opportunity Act Scheme which came into being May 2000.
AGOA is a US Trade Act aimed at significantly enhancing market access to the U.S. for qualifying Sub-Saharan African countries.
Acting Assistant US Trade Representative for Africa, Ms Constance Hamilton, gave the advice in Abuja at a teleconference on the 2017 AGOA Forum, scheduled to hold between Aug. 8 and 10 in Lomé, Togo.
Hamilton was responding to a question on the ban imposed by the East African Community on the importation of second-hand products with the aim of growing the indigenous industry.
EAC is an intergovernmental organisation composed of six countries in the African Great Lakes region in eastern Africa.
The countries are Burundi, Kenya, Rwanda, South Sudan, Tanzania and Uganda.
Burundi, Uganda, Kenya, Rwanda and Tanzania had agreed in 2016 to ban the importation of second-hand clothes, leather products and restrict the use of old vehicles by 2018.
Hamilton said: “One of the things that we were telling the countries of the EAC is that the AGOA criteria is very clear about not putting in place bans or restrictions on U.S. products.
“That is just one of the criteria. We are giving you this advantage to build your apparel sector.
“As you know, AGOA allows for third country fabric from any place in the world for African countries to produce clothing to send to the US and we encourage that.
“That is what AGOA is about and one of its biggest successes has been in the apparel sector,’’ she said.
She said that it would be undesirable for the EAC countries “to say that they are not going to allow U S product which is a legal product, to come to EAC.”
According to her, if EACs turn down used clothing from US, 40,000 people would be out of jobs in US.
“So what we are saying to the countries of the EAC is, we welcome you to use AGOA to the fullest.
“However, please do not ban a legitimate American product and hurt US citizens, companies and our employment.
She said that that the argument that the EAC made that used clothing was stifling their ability to grow their local industry was just not supported by the data or the research.
Hamilton said the used clothing could exist side by side with the local made textile, hence the need for EAC not to ban used clothing coming from US.
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