Namibia launches strategy to increase tariff-free exports to US

Namibia has launched an African Growth and Opportunity Act (Agoa) utilisation strategy to increase its exports under the Agoa programme, which allows the country to export over 6 400 products tariff free to the United States. 

This joint effort to develop the strategy is part of United States efforts to expand mutually beneficial trade with Namibia and is a collaboration between the Ministry of Industrialisation and Trade and other stakeholders, including the Namibian private sector, with support from the US Agency for International Development (USAID).      

The strategy provides a prioritised roadmap on how Namibia can increase its exports to the US under Agoa duty-free market access and recommends steps to address the policy, supply, and market challenges faced by potential Namibian exporters. A body comprising private and public sector representatives will drive the implementation of the strategy.

It identifies priority sectors and categorises them into short-term (e.g., beef and fish, semi-precious stones, grapes, dates, devil’s claw), medium-term (e.g., specialty foods/organic pearl millet products, handicrafts, leather products), and long-term (e.g., indigenous natural products) export potential.

Ambassador Johnson said exports through Agoa would provide entrepreneurs with a chance to revive firms that had suffered heavily as a result of the Covid pandemic and recession, while also providing much-needed employment to help revitalise the economy.