Money Markets

EAC states to build new economic partnerships

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Head of the EU mission to Kenya, Ambassador Eric Van Der Linden. Photo/FILE

Head of the EU mission to Kenya, Ambassador Eric Van Der Linden. Photo/FILE 

By Zeddy Sambu  (email the author)
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Posted  Thursday, November 19  2009 at  00:00

Kenya and other member states of the East African Community (EAC) are expected to negotiate new economic partnership agreements with the European Union before expiry of an interim deal at the end of next month.

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Eric Van Der Linden - the head of the European Union delegation in Nairobi has said that he expects the five member states to come up with a common position when the interim one year EPA deal expires on December 31 , this year.

Technical level

“We have had active consultations at the technical level. What remains is the signatures,” said Mr Linden.

Initial indications were that the EAC countries would sign a framework on the economic partnership agreements (FEPA) by end of July this year.

Most African, Caribbean and Pacific (ACP) countries, Kenya and its EAC partners among them, were however unable to beat this deadline.

According to EAC officials, certain contentious issues, especially with regard to development and aid to trade, were yet to be satisfactorily addressed.

As the deadline looms, top officials from the five EAC states are currently meeting with the hope of ironing out the outstanding issues to pave the way for a full EPA, to be effected from January 1, 2010.

Kenya is represented at the Arusha talks by officials from the ministries of Trade and East African and Regional Co operation.

If Kenya does not sign the FEPA, its trade terms with the Europe will revert to the less generous market access terms available under the General System of Preference (GSP).

This would mean that some of the products it has been exporting to the EU at duty free will attract duty of between 8.5 and 15.7 per cent costing the country billions in revenue.

“Kenya cannot negotiate alone. It is up to the EAC secretariat to own the process,” said Mr Linden.

The ACP states and the EU agreed in Cotonou in 2001, to establish a new trade regime in the form of EPAs to be signed between the EC and countries willing and ready to do so by December 31, 2007, before the extension was granted.

The EU undertook to provide non-reciprocal, duty free market access to all ACP countries except South Africa during the intervening period.

Trade relations between the ACP countries and the EU had, since the 1980s, been guided by non-reciprocal trade preferences which granted nearly all products originating from this ACP states duty free access to the European market.

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