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AGOA (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   135242


Elephant in the room: How China stalked the corridors at the United States-Africa Leaders' Summit even though it wasn't there / Fabricius, Peter   Article
Fabricius, Peter Article
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Summary/Abstract When United States (US) President Barack Obama announced in 2013 that he would host the first United States-Africa leaders' summit the next year, he was greeted with considerable scepticism. Many critics thought he was just playing catch-up with other countries and organisations which had been holding Africa summits for years, especially China. But, whatever the motives, the event itself proved to be a substantial success, probably re-setting US relations with Africa for many years to come.
Key Words Africa  China  US  Barack Obama  Zuma  AGOA 
US-Africa Leaders' Summit  ACIRC  Africa-US Relations 
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2
ID:   102939


Nonreciprocal trade agreements and trade: does the African growth and opportunity act (AGOA) increase trade / Zappile, Tina M   Journal Article
Zappile, Tina M Journal Article
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Publication 2011.
Summary/Abstract The recent proliferation of preferential trade agreements, reaching almost 400 in number, has made it increasingly important to determine their effects on trade flows. This study advances our understanding of the effect of a particular type of trade agreement, a nonreciprocal agreement between a major economic power and less developed countries often used as a foreign policy/foreign aid tool by the major power and allowable under WTO Special and Differential Treatment. The study tests the effect of a recently implemented nonreciprocal agreement between the United States and sub-Saharan Africa, the 2000 African Growth and Opportunity Act (AGOA), on trade. A traditional gravity model is employed to test whether AGOA opens market access in the United States for eligible countries' exports. The results of this study suggest that AGOA membership and eligibility for AGOA textile benefits have no significant effect on trade, an explicit goal of this agreement. Uncertainty about the expiration of preferences, eroding preferential margins, and the inability of African producers to adequately exploit preferences are explanations for these results.
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