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Kenya, U.S. Deal ‘More Symbolic Than Economic’

by kenya-tribune
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As Kenya and the United States initiate negotiations on a bilateral free-trade agreement, Washington-based experts are highlighting the concessions as well as the gains such a deal could entail.

Kenya could be required to remove protective barriers on its insurance and telecommunications sectors while also having to accept genetically modified food imports from the US, suggests an analysis by the Peterson Institute for International Economics.

High tariffs on corn and dairy imports might have to be lowered as well, the research institute adds. Piracy of US intellectual property would also be targeted.

Kenya will likewise need to address US concerns on both child labour and environmental protection, says Jack Caporalan, an international business fellow at the Centre for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS).

The prevalence of child workers helps depress wage rates in Kenya, which is seen by the US as a problem due to attendant cost-savings incentives for US manufacturers looking to move operations overseas.

Wildlife trafficking, illegal logging and marine pollution are among the environmental issues the US is likely to raise, Mr Caporalan says. Kenya’s subsidies to its fisheries could also be put on the table for the trade talks.

In general, the Trump administration will press for an agreement that benefits US businesses. Any new deal will eschew the one-sided advantages Kenya enjoyed under the preferential trade arrangement known as Agoa that is set to expire in 2025.