According to U.S. government officials, sub-Saharan Africa’s (SSA) textile and apparel industry has not achieved the growth anticipated under the African Growth and Opportunity Act (AGOA). Despite the tariff reductions under AGOA, after an initial surge, U.S. imports of these products from beneficiary countries have declined in recent years (see figure). In view of this outcome, the 2008 Andean Trade Preference Extension legislation required GAO to prepare a report identifying changes to U.S. trade preference programs “to provide incentives to increase investment and other measures necessary to improve the competitiveness of [SSA] beneficiary countries in the production of yarns, fabric, and other textile and apparel inputs.”
This report is intended to provide Congress a range of options put forward by experts for (1) possible changes to AGOA or other U.S. trade preference programs and (2) other measures the U.S. government could take to help increase investment in and improve competitiveness of SSA textile and apparel inputs production.
To address these objectives, GAO considered the findings of a study prepared by the U.S. International Trade Commission that identified products that could be produced competitively in AGOA beneficiary countries. GAO also convened a panel of experts and key informants to discuss their views and prioritize the options that GAO identified.
What GAO Found
Many of the options discussed by the panel of experts GAO convened address the need to consider the trade-offs inherent in trade preference programs. Furthermore, experts emphasized that the link between trade policy and economic development complicates potential policy responses. While AGOA has generous benefits for textile and apparel, many SSA countries face infrastructure and development challenges that must be addressed before they can fully take advantage of these benefits.Recognizing this interplay, GAO’s panel of experts and key informants gave greatest priority to options they believed provide long-term investors with predictability of benefits and encourage regional commitments relative to other developing countries. Such options included:
Extending the duration of the third-country fabric provision for least developed AGOA countries beyond 2012, and
Extending the duration of overall AGOA benefits beyond 2015.
The panel similarly gave greatest priority to the options for other development measures that focused on supporting investment through trade capacity building. Many experts considered trade capacity building to be a key component of improving the competitiveness of African textile and apparel inputs production, and in developing the physical and market infrastructure needed for a vibrant export sector. Such options included:
Funding regional trade hubs and focusing on market promotion and business linkages, and
Aligning U.S. trade capacity building and development assistance with AGOA objectives.
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