US senators renew Africa trade pact through 2041
A bipartisan group of senators has introduced a bill to renew the U.S. trade pact with sub-Saharan Africa ahead of its expiration next year, an aide to one of the senators said on Thursday.
The bill was introduced
by Senators Chris Coons, a Democrat, and James Risch, top Republican on the
Senate Foreign Relations Committee. A cross-party group of senators - Dick
Durbin, Michael Bennet, Chris van Hollen, Todd Young and Mike Rounds - is co-sponsoring
the bill.
An aide to Coons said it was a high priority to reauthorize the African Growth and Opportunity Act (AGOA) this year.
The bill would renew the
African Growth and Opportunity Act for 16 years, through 2041, and help
countries implement strategies to take advantage of the programme.
It would also maintain
benefits for countries as they grow richer, enabling them to remain in the
programme if they are determined to be high-income for five years rather than removing
them if they reach that threshold for a single year.
Under the bill, countries
would be reviewed for eligibility every other year instead of annually as under
the current statute. But the U.S. president and certain congressional leaders
could review countries' eligibility out of cycle anytime.
If countries were found
ineligible for the program, the president would have a menu of options for
enforcement ranging from full termination of benefits to taking no action.
Current statute requires the president to terminate AGOA benefits if a country
does not meet eligibility.
A draft of the bill
introduced by Coons last November mandated an immediate out-of-cycle
review for South Africa, one of the biggest beneficiaries of the program, but
it is not included in this version of the bill.
An aide to Coons said it
was viewed as unnecessary to single out a particular country since the bill
already allows for out-of-cycle reviews, but senators remain concerned about
South Africa's activities.
A Democratic aide to the
Senate Finance Committee said Ron Wyden, chairman of the panel, "supports
renewing AGOA and looks forward to working with the committees of jurisdiction
and other interested members to develop a bipartisan, bicameral bill."
President Joe Biden has
said he supports reauthorization of the pact initially enacted in 2000.
More than $10 billion worth of African exports entered the U.S. duty-free under
the program in 2022, according the U.S. Trade Representative's office.
American business groups
have said they need certainty about AGOA in order for African countries to
take advantage of global efforts to lower dependence on Chinese manufacturing.
An aide to Senate
Democratic leader Chuck Schumer did not immediately respond to a request for
comment.
Reuters

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