What Trump's new tariffs means for Kenya, other African countries

U.S. President Donald Trump displays a signed an executive order in the Oval Office of the White House on March 26, 2025 in Washington, DC. (Photo by WIN MCNAMEE/Getty Images via AFP)
On Wednesday, U.S. President
Donald Trump announced the latest round of trade tariffs on all imports into
America, which ultimately caught up with Kenya.
President Trump said the U.S. would, from April 5 at 12.01 a.m. (GMT), impose a 10 percent baseline tariff on all U.S. imports from 185 countries, including Kenya.
The 10 percent will be a
"commencement tariff," which means there will be more or elevated
tariffs for countries the U.S. feels have taken advantage of the American
economy over the years.
Kenya will likely have a
cumulative tariff threshold of twenty percent after the latest round of
sweeping orders by Trump.
In anticipation of these elevated
tariffs, Kenya’s Ministry of Trade said last week that they were in talks with
American trade officials to safeguard Kenya’s duty-free or very favourable duty
access for its goods into the U.S. market.
Trade and Industry Cabinet
Secretary Lee Kinyanjui disclosed that the government is in ongoing
negotiations with a team of policymakers from the U.S. to discuss the issue. He
added that Kenya is keen to protect its textile exports to the U.S.
The U.S. is the country’s second-largest
trading partner, in terms of the value of exports. Kenya charges the U.S. a 10
percent tariff on U.S.-sourced goods, and these reciprocal charges are set to
affect Kenya’s total goods trade with America, which stood at $1.5 billion in
2024.
The executive order on minimum
tariffs has a bearing on all exports from Kenya to the U.S., including products
under the African Growth and Opportunity Act (AGOA), which saw Kenya export to
the U.S. over 50 percent of duty-exempt goods and which is due to expire this
year.
Over many years and under several
U.S. administrations, Kenya has been a beneficiary of low import duties to the
U.S., especially under the AGOA program.
Kenya is a party to the Trade and
Investment Framework Agreements (TIFA), which saw the East African Community
(EAC) sign a trade pact with the U.S. in 2008. Kenya was again incorporated
into the pact that operationalized the Common Market for Eastern and Southern
Africa (COMESA), signed with the U.S. in 2001, because Kenya is a member of
both regional organizations.
In 2024, the total value of U.S.
goods traded with Kenya stood at $1.5 billion, while its goods exports to Kenya
in 2024 were valued at $782.5 million, up 61.4 percent ($297.8 million) from
2023. U.S. goods imports from Kenya in 2024 were valued at $737.3 million, down
17.5 percent ($156.7 million) from 2023. The U.S. goods trade surplus with
Kenya was $45.2 million in 2024, a 111.0 percent increase ($454.6 million) over
2023.
Cascading tariffs with a base of ten percent for all countries trading
with the U.S.
President Trump’s new executive
order has put in place a cascading tariff system in which all tariffs start at
a minimum of 10 percent and cascade upwards based on several factors, such
as the balance of trade between the U.S. and a particular country.
The current rate of tariffs
between the U.S. and a particular country will affect the tariffs, as well as
whether there are retaliatory tariffs put in place by the countries affected.
Kenya falls under countries with wide trade with the U.S. and will incur an
additional 10 percent tariff, raising the total to 20 percent.
However, the U.S. will exempt
incoming copper, pharmaceuticals, semiconductors, lumber, gold, energy, and
certain specific minerals, which shall not be subject to reciprocal tariffs,
according to the authorities in Washington, D.C. Kenya imports none of these
exempt goods to the U.S.
The U.S. is Kenya’s
second-biggest trading partner, in value of transactions, after Uganda.
The Observatory of Economic
Complexity (OEC), which offers detailed global trade data covering over 500
subnational regions and thousands of products, says Kenya’s top export market
is Uganda ($893M), followed by the United States ($838M), United Arab Emirates
($716M), Netherlands ($706M), and Pakistan ($520M) in the year 2023.
Also affected were several
African countries that were slapped with the 10 percent tariff for accessing
the U.S. market with their goods and produce. These, among others, are Rwanda,
Burundi, Eritrea, South Sudan, Sudan, Ethiopia, and Uganda.
Trump imposed higher tariffs on
Nigeria (14%), Malawi (17%), Zimbabwe (18%), DRC (11%), Zambia (17%), and
Mozambique (16%). The tiny southern African nation, Lesotho, which levies a 99
percent tariff on U.S. goods, was hit with a 50 percent reciprocal tariff.
Other African countries affected
include Mauritius, charged 40% as it charges the U.S. 80%; Botswana now to be
charged 37% as it charges the U.S. 74%; Algeria to be charged 30% as it charges
the U.S. 59%; and Tunisia to be charged 28%, as it charges the U.S. 55%.
Washington said the new regime of tariffs would take effect on April 9.
Tariffs are taxes charged at the
point of entry of goods imported into a sovereign country. Whoever is the
importer then pays these tariff charges at the point of entry to the customs
agency of the host country as a levy.
The tariff is charged as a
percentage of a given product’s value. For instance, a tariff of 20 percent on
a product of Ksh.1000 would incur a Ksh.200 tariff and
hence make it more expensive than a local product of the same
kind.
Tariffs are not only levied on
finished goods but could also be levied on components and raw materials
entering a particular country. Tariffs, therefore, could increase the cost of
manufacturing significantly. Tariffs dissuade domestic would-be consumers from
buying imported goods as they become more expensive due to the tax.
They are also a deterrent to
trade, and as trade barriers, they constitute deliberate hurdles to
international trade as they raise the price of imported products for both
traders and, ultimately, consumers.
On the other hand, tariffs
provide motivation for domestic manufacturers to produce more and for domestic
customers to buy local produce, which are tariff-free and most probably
cheaper.
There are countries that shy
away from using tariffs but resort to using non-tariff barriers to trade, such
as import quotas, licenses and permits, regulations, stringent safety
standards, among others.
President Trump labelled the move
to use trade tariffs “Liberation Day” for the United States of America. It
aligns with his motto of “Make America Great Again” or “MAGA.”
President Trump hopes his
expansive use of tariffs will cause American manufacturers to move production
back to the United States and away from the cheap factories they had set up
overseas, thereby ushering in a golden era for the U.S. economy.
As Trump’s tariffs start rocking
the receipts from Kenya’s exports to the U.S., the first to feel the pinch will
be the local Export Processing Zone industries, which would ultimately
experience a decline in revenues and ultimately total closure as their
revenues dwindle.
As AGOA also nears its end, it
will be a matter of time before there will be massive lay-offs of workers and
the eventual closing down of the affected industries.
Kenya’s trade value with the
U.S., which is its second-biggest global trade partner, will plummet
significantly, and this will result in less earnings for the government in
terms of real foreign exchange. Ultimately, with a high debt portfolio, Kenya’s
cost of borrowing will rise, and with this, the attendant economic and
socio-political tensions.
The Organization for Economic
Co-operation and Development (OECD) warned recently that in a scenario in which
tariff rates are permanently raised by the U.S. and all of its trading partners
by an additional 10 percentage points, global output could fall by about 0.3%
by the third year after their introduction.
Global inflation could rise by
0.4 percentage points per annum on average over the first three years, and this
will greatly affect poorer countries as the global economy contracts and
financing becomes very costly.
America’s soft power through
offering special trade mechanisms to poorer countries will be taken away, and
each country will start negotiating with the U.S. while looking inwards—Kenya
included.
Kenya might have to take
seriously some of the ignored cards on the table, such as the intra-Africa
trade pact, the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA), and this would
spur trade among Kenya’s African neighbours.
The African Continental Free
Trade Area (AfCFTA), a pact signed by 44 African Union member states in 2018,
aims to create a single market for goods and services, boost intra-African
trade, and strengthen Africa's position in global markets.
In the mid-1900s, tariffs made up
almost 90% of the revenue for the federal government of the United States of
America. President Trump’s tariffs may soon contribute way beyond the current
two percent of federal government revenues.
But for struggling countries such
as Kenya, the tariff taxes over a long time might mean a slide into recession
as stock markets take a plunge; recession will be unavoidable in the medium to
long term.
The tariff war sparked off by
Trump will be a burden heaviest on struggling countries like Kenya, even as
more analysts warn that the new tariffs could overturn global supply chains and
hurt corporate profits for years to come.
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