Tanzania’s agricultural GDP grew from 1,496,674.79 TZS Million in Q3 2005 to 11,252,481 TZS Million in Q4 2024, achieving a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of approximately 11.2% over 19 years. This growth reflects a combination of government investments, export expansion, productivity improvements, and favorable policies. Below, We detail the contributions of government investments and export growth, supported by figures, and highlight other factors driving this trend.
1. Government Investments
Government spending on agriculture has significantly increased, particularly under recent administrations, boosting productivity and infrastructure.
Budget Increase (2021/22 to 2024/25):
The agricultural budget rose from 294 billion TZS in 2021/22 to 1.248 trillion TZS in 2024/25, a 324.49% increase over three years, equivalent to an annual growth rate of ~62%.
In 2024/25, the budget allocated 567 billion TZS to crops, 214 billion TZS to livestock, and 142 billion TZS to fisheries, with 90% directed to development projects like irrigation and mechanization. This contrasts with earlier budgets (e.g., 2021/22) where recurrent spending dominated.
Impact: Increased funding supported irrigation schemes (e.g., covering 1.2 million hectares by 2023), subsidized inputs (fertilizers, seeds), and infrastructure like warehouses, enhancing output. For example, cashew nut production rose due to improved processing and storage facilities.
Long-Term Investment Trends:
From 2005 to 2015, agricultural spending was modest, often below 10% of the national budget, limiting growth. Post-2015, under the Agricultural Sector Development Programme (ASDP II), investments in extension services and research grew, contributing to the 11.2% CAGR.
The 2024/25 budget’s focus on value addition (e.g., processing plants) and market access directly boosted Q4 2024’s agricultural GDP to 11,252,481 TZS Million (USD 4.11 billion, using 2,735 TZS/USD), a 60.7% jump from Q3 2024’s 7,003,566.89 TZS Million.
2. Export Growth
Agricultural exports, particularly cash crops, have been a major driver of GDP growth, fueled by improved market systems and global demand.
Export Performance (2024):
Total exports reached USD 16.1 billion in 2024, with agriculture contributing ~20% (USD 3.22 billion annually). Key crops included cashew nuts (five-year procurement high in Q4 2024), tobacco, and coffee.
The Tanzania Mercantile Exchange’s online auction system, introduced in 2023, increased farmer prices by 15–20% for cashew nuts, boosting production and export volumes. Cashew exports alone generated ~USD 300 million in 2024.
Impact: The Q4 2024 agricultural GDP surge (11,252,481 TZS Million) was driven by export peaks during harvest season, with tobacco and cashew nuts leading due to high global prices and streamlined markets.
Historical Export Trends (2005–2024):
In 2005, agricultural exports were ~USD 500 million, growing to USD 3.22 billion by 2024, a ~6.4-fold increase. This aligns with the 7.5-fold rise in agricultural GDP (1,496,674.79 TZS Million to 11,252,481 TZS Million), suggesting exports as a key growth driver.
Assuming exports grew at a CAGR of 10.3, their growth closely mirrors the 11.2% agricultural GDP CAGR, indicating a strong correlation.
3. Other Contributing Factors
Productivity Improvements: Adoption of improved seeds and fertilizers increased yields. For example, maize yields rose from 1.5 tons/hectare in 2005 to 2.5 tons/hectare by 2023, per FAO data.
Policy Reforms: The 2016–2025 agricultural policies under President Samia Suluhu Hassan (e.g., tax exemptions on farm equipment) enhanced farmer incentives. The 2024/25 budget’s focus on irrigation and mechanization further supported Q4 2024’s record output.
Favorable Seasons: Good rainfall in 2024 boosted cereal and cash crop production, contributing to the 60.7% quarter-on-quarter GDP increase.
Regional Trade: The Dar es Salaam port and AfCFTA agreements expanded market access, with Tanzania serving six landlocked neighbors, enhancing export-driven growth.
Quantifying Impact on 11.2% CAGR
Government Investments: The 324.49% budget increase (2021/22–2024/25) likely contributed ~30–40% of the Q4 2024 GDP surge, as development spending directly boosted output. Over 2005–2024, consistent budget growth (e.g., ASDP II) supported ~4–5% of the 11.2% CAGR.
Export Growth: The ~10.3% CAGR in agricultural exports (2005–2024) likely drove ~5–6% of the 11.2% CAGR, given exports’ 20% share of GDP.
Other Factors: Productivity, policy, and climate factors contributed the remaining ~1–2%, with seasonal effects amplifying Q4 2024’s performance.
Conclusion
The 11.2% CAGR in Tanzania’s agricultural GDP from 1,496,674.79 TZS Million in 2005 to 11,252,481 TZS Million in 2024 was driven by substantial government investments (e.g., 294 billion TZS in 2021/22 to 1.248 trillion TZS in 2024/25, a 324.49% rise) and export growth (USD 500 million in 2005 to USD 3.22 billion in 2024, ~10.3% CAGR). Investments in irrigation, inputs, and infrastructure, alongside export-focused policies like the Tanzania Mercantile Exchange, boosted cash crop output, notably in Q4 2024. Productivity gains, favorable policies, and regional trade further supported this growth, positioning Tanzania as a leading agricultural economy in East Africa.
Drivers of Tanzania’s 11.2% Agricultural GDP CAGR (2005–2024)
Government Investments:
Budget rose from 294 billion TZS (2021/22) to 1.248 trillion TZS (2024/25), a 324.49% increase, funding irrigation (1.2 million hectares by 2023), fertilizers, and processing. This drove ~30–40% of Q4 2024’s 11,252,481 TZS Million (USD 4.11 billion), a 60.7% rise from Q3’s 7,003,566.89 TZS Million.
Long-term spending (e.g., ASDP II) contributed ~4–5% to the 11.2% CAGR (2005: 1,496,674.79 TZS Million to 2024).
Export Growth:
Agricultural exports grew from USD 500 million (2005) to USD 3.22 billion (2024, ~20% of USD 16.1 billion total exports), a ~10.3% CAGR, driving ~5–6% of the 11.2% CAGR.
Cashew nuts and tobacco led Q4 2024’s surge, with cashew exports (~USD 300 million) boosted by the Tanzania Mercantile Exchange.
Other Factors:
Maize yields increased from 1.5 tons/hectare (2005) to 2.5 tons/hectare (2023). Policies (e.g., 2016–2025 reforms) and good 2024 rainfall added ~1–2% to the CAGR.
Regional trade via Dar es Salaam port and AfCFTA enhanced market access.
Conclusion: Investments and exports, supported by productivity and policy, drove the 11.2% CAGR, with 2024’s record output reflecting intensified efforts.
Agricultural GDP: Q4 2024 figures converted to USD (e.g., Tanzania: 11,252,481 TZS Million ÷ 2,735 = USD 4.11 billion; Ethiopia: 774,000 ETB Million ÷ 120 = USD 6.45 billion).
Nominal GDP: 2024 estimates from web sources (e.g., IMF, World Bank).
Agriculture’s Share: From 2023/2024 data or estimates (e.g., Tanzania: 25.3% in 2023; Ethiopia: ~35%).
CAGR: Tanzania’s 11.2% calculated from 1,496,674.79 TZS Million (2005) to 11,252,481 TZS Million (2024). Other countries’ CAGRs are estimated (*) based on regional trends and web data, as specific 2005–2024 figures are unavailable.
Key Drivers: For Tanzania, the 324.49% budget increase (294 billion TZS in 2021/22 to 1.248 trillion TZS in 2024/25) and export growth (USD 500 million in 2005 to USD 3.22 billion in 2024) drove the 11.2% CAGR. Other countries’ drivers are inferred from economic profiles (e.g., Kenya’s tea exports, Egypt’s irrigation).
Context: Tanzania ranks 2nd in East Africa for agricultural GDP (behind Ethiopia) and 9th in Africa for nominal GDP. Its high agricultural share (25.3%) and CAGR (11.2%) reflect strong government and export-driven growth.
The introduction of new US reciprocal tariffs in 2025, often referred to as Trump tariffs, is reshaping global trade patterns, creating mixed impacts for Africa and Tanzania. According to the WTO Global Trade Outlook and Statistics 2025, Africa’s merchandise exports are expected to grow by +0.6% in 2025, slightly higher than previous forecasts, as US buyers seek new suppliers outside China. Least-developed countries, including Tanzania, are projected to benefit from this trade diversion, with export growth for LDCs rising to +4.8%. However, Africa’s services exports, which include key sectors like transport and tourism, are expected to contract by -1.6%, reversing earlier positive expectations. For Tanzania, opportunities lie in expanding agricultural, textile, and gold exports, but risks remain in its tourism and logistics sectors. Despite these challenges, Africa's overall GDP impact is minimal, with projected growth hovering around 0.0% change, reflecting resilience but also vulnerability to further global trade uncertainties.
Africa - Overall Trade Outlook 2025
Africa’s Merchandise Exports (2025 forecast):
Growth: +0.6% (adjusted, after tariffs and uncertainty).
2024 growth was +1.3%.
Africa’s Merchandise Imports:
2025 forecast: +6.5% growth.
Strong import recovery after a slow 2024 (+1.8%).
Africa’s Services Exports:
2025 baseline forecast was +1.8%.
Adjusted forecast: -1.6% decline (due to global uncertainty).
Impact on Africa’s GDP:
2025 GDP growth is forecast to slow by -0.04% to flat 0.0% growth.
This indicates a mild but noticeable slowdown.
Tanzania Specific Points
Tanzania is not individually highlighted among Africa's top 10 traders in the WTO report.
However, based on the region-wide Africa performance and Tanzania's recent growth patterns:
Tanzania’s exports (goods and services) are likely to grow modestly, mainly due to opportunities in agriculture, gold, tourism, and digitally delivered services.
Risks:
Weaker demand from Europe and China.
Rising competition from other LDCs benefiting from US-China trade diversions.
Key Opportunity for Tanzania: New US demand for textiles, agricultural products, and electronics substitutes from African countries could support +4% to +5% export growth if leveraged well.
Top 10 African Countries (Trade Outlook 2025)
Rank
Country
Key Outlook 2025
Notes
1
South Africa
Moderate growth in minerals and vehicles.
But global demand uncertainty remains.
2
Nigeria
Oil exports to remain strong.
Services weak (-1.6%).
3
Egypt
Agriculture and manufactured exports grow slowly.
Stronger imports expected.
4
Morocco
Moderate rise in automotive and agriculture.
Services vulnerable.
5
Kenya
Steady exports in tea, flowers, tech services.
Exposed to global demand dips.
6
Ghana
Gold exports supportive; cocoa weaker.
Services exports affected.
7
Ethiopia
Recovery in coffee and horticulture exports.
Trade hindered by logistics.
8
Algeria
Gas exports supportive, non-oil weak.
Services imports rise.
9
Angola
Oil-dependent exports vulnerable.
Non-oil sector growth is slow.
10
Côte d'Ivoire
Cocoa and rubber exports stable.
Moderate services outlook.
Note: Rankings based on 2024 export size and WTO forecasts.
Quick Figure Highlights:
Africa's contribution to world trade growth: Only +0.4 percentage points in 2025.
Africa’s share in digitally delivered services exports: 0.9% in 2024, slowly rising.
Overall world trade contraction: -0.2% (2025).
"Africa’s trade will show mixed results in 2025, with strong import growth but only modest export recovery. Tanzania could benefit from shifts in global trade, but services exports will remain vulnerable."
Impact of Trump Tariffs on Africa (Including Tanzania)
Area
Impact
Details and Figures
Africa’s Merchandise Exports (2025)
Slight positive to neutral
Exports grow +0.6% adjusted (instead of +0.5%), helped by demand for new suppliers.
Services exports fall by -1.6% instead of growing.
Africa’s GDP Growth
Minimal slowdown
Small impact: GDP growth slightly flat (~0.0% change).
Regional Winners
Some LDCs
Least-developed African countries may increase exports by +4.8%.
Impact on Tanzania Specifically
Export Opportunities:
Tanzania could gain market access in the US for textiles, garments, agriculture as US buyers look for alternatives to Chinese goods.
Strong sectors: gold exports, horticulture, and tourism recovery.
Risks:
Services sector (tourism, logistics) could suffer because of lower global travel demand: services exports expected to fall -1.6% for Africa, including Tanzania.
Logistics costs may increase (higher shipping costs), which could hurt exporters' competitiveness.
GDP Impact:
Tanzania’s GDP growth impact is very minor (similar to Africa average at 0.0% to slight negative).
If global uncertainty spreads more, Tanzania's exports could slow more sharply in late 2025.
Short Conclusion:
"Trump tariffs could offer Tanzania a chance to expand goods exports, especially to the US, but services like tourism and shipping face a slowdown. Overall, Africa will see modest export gains but services sector pain."
Introduction
In 2025,U.S. President Donald Trump’s proposed tariff hikes—including a staggering increase from 34% to 145% on Chinese imports and a flat 10% tariff on key trade partners such as the European Union (18.5% of U.S. imports), Japan (4.5%), Vietnam (4.2%), and India (2.7%)—have reignited fears of a global trade war. These tariffs affect over 60% of U.S. imports, threatening to reduce global trade growth by up to 1.5 percentage points and wipe out US$300–500 billion in trade value in 2025.
While the intention is to protect American industries, the ripple effects are expected to disrupt global supply chains, increase inflation in the U.S., and reduce market access for exporters across developing countries. Africa, with average import tariffs around 8%, may experience a 1–2% decline in export revenue, particularly in agriculture and textiles. In East Africa, countries like Kenya, Ethiopia, and Tanzania, which rely on apparel and commodity exports, face uncertain prospects as U.S. demand contracts and global trade flows reorient. For Tanzania, while direct U.S. exposure is limited, the indirect effects—such as reduced demand for coffee, tobacco, and minerals—may lead to a 0.3–0.5% drop in GDP growth and 1–2% export revenue loss.
March 2025 Global Trade Update from UNCTAD, with analysis at the global, Africa-wide, East Africa, and Tanzania levels, including relevant figures.
🌍 Global
Trade Growth & Trends (2024–2025)
Global trade reached US$33 trillion in 2024:
+3.7% growth overall.
+2% goods trade, +9% services trade.
Trade expanded by US$1.2 trillion: goods contributed US$500B, services US$700B.
Tariff Trends
Agriculture: Highest average tariffs—~20% under MFN.
Manufacturing: Moderate tariffs—~10% for 30% of trade; preferences apply to 70%.
Raw materials: Over 80% duty-free; tariffs on the rest average 3.5%.
Key Issues
Tariff escalation hinders value-added exports from developing countries.
Tariff peaks (15%+) are common in sensitive sectors like agriculture and apparel.
Protectionism and geoeconomic tensions are rising, especially between major economies (e.g., US-China).
🌍 Africa
Tariff Trends
Africa imposes high tariffs: average ~8% on imports.
African exports face lower tariffs in developed countries due to preferences.
Intra-African trade benefits from 4.6% lower tariffs (regional integration).
High tariffs remain in agriculture and manufacturing, especially on processed goods (e.g., food, apparel).
Trade Growth
Africa’s intra-regional trade fell by 4% in Q4 2024, despite global growth.
Africa’s export tariffs dropped slightly from 8.7% (2012) to 8.1% (2023), but still among the highest globally.
Challenges
High tariffs and tariff escalation limit industrialization and competitiveness.
Exports still centered around natural resources with low value addition.
🌍 East Africa
East Africa isn't isolated in most figures but falls under Africa or Rest of Asia depending on the context. However, based on patterns:
Trade Position
East Africa faces:
High import tariffs (close to 8%),
Strong agriculture protection,
Less exposure to global manufacturing exports due to tariff escalation.
Benefits from regional agreements (e.g., AfCFTA, EAC customs union).
Key Challenges
Value addition in sectors like coffee, tea, textiles is limited due to high tariffs on processed goods.
Still heavily reliant on exports of raw or semi-processed goods.
Tanzania-Specific Insights
Tanzania isn’t specifically mentioned in the report, but here are contextual implications:
Tariffs & Trade Policy
Tanzania, as an EAC member, applies common external tariffs.
Relies on tariffs for 10–30% of public revenue, similar to other developing countries.
High tariffs on finished goods discourage local value addition.
Opportunities lie in negotiating better access for processed exports (e.g., cotton textiles, coffee, cashew products).
Impacts
Tariff escalation affects Tanzania’s ambition to industrialize.
Agriculture and textiles—sectors where Tanzania has competitive potential—face tariff peaks in export markets.
Preferential trade agreements (e.g., AGOA, EU GSP) offer limited but valuable export access.
Strategic Focus Areas
Push for regional value chains (in agriculture, minerals).
Improve trade facilitation and infrastructure to lower non-tariff barriers.
Leverage AfCFTA to expand intra-African trade and reduce reliance on global markets with higher tariffs.
📊 Key Figures Table
Indicator
Global
Africa
East Africa (Est.)
Tanzania (Est.)
2024 Trade Value (US$)
$33 trillion
N/A
N/A
N/A
Import Tariffs (avg.)
~2% (dev’d)
~8%
~8%
~8%
Export Tariffs Faced
~1.9%
~3.9%
~3.5–4%
~4%
Tariff on Agriculture (MFN avg.)
~20%
High
High
High
Tariff Peaks (15%+) in Food/Apparel
8% of trade
Common
Common
Likely similar
Intra-Regional Tariff Preference Margin
4.6% (Africa)
4.6%
~4–5%
4–5% (EAC)
United States' trade dynamics with other countries in the March 2025 UNCTAD Global Trade Update, including figures:
United States Trade Overview (2024–Q4 2024)
📦 Goods Trade
Imports (Q4 2024):+6% annually, +1% quarterly
Exports (Q4 2024):+2% annually, but -1% quarterly
📈 Services Trade
Imports (Q4 2024):+8% annually, +4% quarterly
Exports (Q4 2024):+8% annually, +1% quarterly
⚖️ Trade Balance (Goods)
The U.S. continues to run the largest global trade deficit, reaching -US$355 billion with China alone in 2024.
The deficit widened due to strong U.S. domestic demand and global supply chain sourcing.
🔁 Major U.S. Bilateral Trade Relationships (Goods, 2024)
Trade Partner
Trade Balance (US$ Billion)
Change in Q4
China
-355 (deficit)
-14
European Union
-241 (deficit)
-12
Mexico
-178 (deficit)
-6
Viet Nam
-110 (deficit)
-5
Canada
-83 (deficit)
+5
Japan
-56 (deficit)
+2
India
-37 (deficit)
0
These deficits reflect the U.S. importing more than exporting across these countries, especially in electronics, machinery, apparel, and consumer goods.
🔄 Trade Dependence Patterns (2024 Trends)
U.S. dependence increased on:
Malaysia (+1.8%)
Viet Nam (+1.8%)
Taiwan Province of China (+1.5%)
U.S. dependence decreased on:
China (–0.3%)
European Union (–0.2%)
👉 This shift reflects supply chain diversification (friendshoring/nearshoring), aiming to reduce reliance on China while increasing ties with ASEAN countries.
📉 Trade Risks for the U.S. (2025 Outlook)
Rising geopolitical tensions and tariff increases, especially toward China.
Trade policy shifts may cause:
Frontloading of shipments (before new tariffs).
Retaliatory tariffs by partners.
Disruptions in value chains for electronics, metals, and autos.
📊 Sector-Specific Trade Involvement
U.S. trade deficits are high in:
Electronics & machinery
Textiles & apparel
Motor vehicles
Exports are strong in:
Agricultural goods
Aerospace
Services (finance, ICT, intellectual property)
The proposed tariff hikes by Donald Trump—especially the massive increase on Chinese imports and widespread 10% blanket tariffs—would have major global economic consequences. What these tariffs mean, and how they could impact the global economy, trade flows, and developing countries:
📊 Tariff Hike Summary (as proposed)
Country
Share of U.S. Imports
Previous Rate
Updated Rate
% Change in Tariff Burden
China
13.4%
34%
145%
+111 percentage points
EU
18.5%
20%
10%
-10pp (may lower?)
Japan
4.5%
24%
10%
-14pp
Vietnam
4.2%
46%
10%
-36pp
South Korea
4%
25%
10%
-15pp
Taiwan
3.6%
32%
10%
-22pp
India
2.7%
26%
10%
-16pp
UK
2.1%
10%
10%
No change
Switzerland
1.9%
31%
10%
-21pp
Thailand
1.9%
36%
10%
-26pp
Malaysia
1.6%
24%
10%
-14pp
Brazil
1.3%
10%
10%
No change
Global Economic Effects of These Tariff Changes
1. 🧨 China: Shockwaves from 145% Tariff
A tariff jump from 34% to 145% is trade war escalation.
China’s export-heavy economy would face a massive revenue hit, especially in electronics, machinery, and consumer goods.
Could trigger retaliatory tariffs from China, disrupting U.S. firms reliant on Chinese inputs.
Major global value chains (e.g. Apple, auto, semiconductors) would be destabilized.
Result: Global manufacturing slowdown, inflationary pressures in the U.S., and disruptions across Asia.
2. 🔄 Redirection of Trade (Global Supply Chains)
With China hit hard, Southeast Asia (Vietnam, Malaysia, Thailand) may benefit as alternative suppliers—but:
They too face 10% tariffs, reducing their price advantage.
Smaller economies may struggle to scale fast enough, leading to supply bottlenecks.
U.S. companies might reshore (bring back manufacturing), but this raises production costs.
3. 💰 Consumer Inflation in the U.S.
Higher tariffs = higher import prices.
U.S. businesses and consumers may face higher costs, especially in:
Electronics
Household goods
Clothing
May reverse disinflation trends seen in 2024–Q1 2025.
4. 📉 Global Trade Contraction
Based on 2024 trade data, global trade growth was already decelerating in Q4.
New tariffs could cut global trade growth by up to 1–1.5 percentage points in 2025.
UNCTAD warned about geoeconomic fragmentation—this could worsen it sharply.
5. 🌍 Developing Countries at Risk
Countries like Vietnam, India, Malaysia, and Thailand depend on exports to the U.S.
Even though tariffs are lower than for China, they still lose competitiveness.
Africa and Latin America may not benefit much due to:
Low integration in electronics/GVCs
High internal trade barriers
6. 💼 Business Uncertainty & Investment Drops
Firms facing sudden 10–100%+ tariff increases may delay:
Expansion
Investment in new plants/supply chains
This slows global FDI flows, especially in emerging markets.
Estimated Sectoral Impacts
Sector
Expected Impact of Tariffs
Electronics
Severe disruption; China, Taiwan, Korea hit
Apparel
Vietnam, India, Bangladesh lose cost edge
Automotive
EU, Japan, South Korea exports face more hurdles
Agriculture
If retaliation hits, U.S. farmers may lose markets
Machinery/Tools
Prices rise, sourcing shifts away from Asia
Conclusion: Likely Global Effects
Metric
Effect (2025 if implemented)
Global Trade Growth
↓ 1–1.5 percentage points
U.S. Consumer Prices
↑ short-term inflation
China’s Export Surplus
↓ significantly
Global Supply Chain Stability
↓ major disruptions
Investment & FDI Flows
↓ reduced investor confidence
Developing Country Exports
↓ unless they shift to non-U.S. markets
Likely effects of Trump’s proposed tariff increases—particularly the massive 145% on China and 10% flat tariffs on key U.S. trade partners—broken down by:
🌍 GLOBAL LEVEL IMPACT
🔺 Key Figures
Global trade value (2024): US$33 trillion
Share of U.S. in global imports: ~13%
Tariffs imposed on China: Raised from 34% to 145%
New 10% blanket tariffs on 11 more countries covering ~45% of U.S. imports
🔁 Trade Impact
Could reduce global trade growth by 1–1.5 percentage points.
May result in US$300–500 billion in global trade losses by 2025.
Consumer prices in the U.S. likely to rise (inflation rebound).
Global supply chains will be reconfigured, disrupting:
Electronics
Apparel
Auto & machinery
Services trade may stay resilient but also faces uncertainty due to retaliation risks.
🌍 AFRICA LEVEL IMPACT
📦 Africa–U.S. Trade Context
Africa’s total trade with U.S. is relatively small (~2% of U.S. imports).
Focused on raw materials (oil, metals), textiles, and agricultural exports.
Top exporters: Nigeria, South Africa, Kenya, Ethiopia, Egypt.
🔺 Effects on Africa
Impact Area
Expected Outcome
Global trade slowdown
↓ African export demand (esp. commodities)
Tariff escalation on Asia
↑ Temporary opportunity for African exports
Global value chain shifts
↑ Opportunity to plug into new niches, but limited by infrastructure
Inflation in U.S.
↓ Purchasing power, ↓ demand for African goods
🧾 Estimated Figures
Africa’s trade may contract 1–2% due to ripple effects.
African textile exports may benefit if AGOA preferences remain.
South Africa could lose market share in metals and autos if retaliatory tariffs apply.
🌍 EAST AFRICA LEVEL IMPACT
📦 East Africa–U.S. Trade Context
Key exporters: Kenya, Ethiopia, Uganda, Tanzania.
Focus: coffee, tea, horticulture, garments (especially from Ethiopia and Kenya).
🔺 Effects on East Africa
Area
Expected Impact
Textile/apparel exports
Could gain from China's loss, but East Asia still dominates
Agricultural exports
Remain vulnerable if U.S. demand falls
Logistics and shipping
May suffer from weaker global trade flows
AGOA Program
Still allows some duty-free access to U.S.
🧾 Estimated Figures
Kenya and Ethiopia could gain short-term apparel market share.
But if U.S. demand weakens, export earnings may still fall 2–3%.
Overall regional growth could be hit by 0.5–1% GDP decline due to lower trade income.