The African Growth and Opportunity Act (AGOA) remains one of the most significant trade initiatives between the United States and sub-Saharan Africa.
First passed around the year 2000 under President Bill Clinton, AGOA provided duty-free access into the U.S. market for many product categories, that included everything from textiles and apparel to agricultural goods.
For many African countries, AGOA had been more than just a trade law. It has served as a development policy tool, offering an opportunity to integrate into global value chains, attract investment, and create jobs.
Ghana, in league with its peers, has leveraged AGOA to diversify exports and expand its non-traditional exports such as apparel, cocoa derivatives, and handicrafts.
Yet, the promise of AGOA remains largely unfulfilled. Why? Because while Ghana and many of its West African peers had a rare opportunity to transform their export base while pushing nontraditional exports to scale, that window was only faintly used.
Ghana’s export portfolio continues to hinge on the same familiar triad; cocoa, gold, and oil; which together accounted for over 80 percent of total exports value in 2021.
This is not a mere statistic; it is a mirror of an inchoate industrial base, a symptom of policy inertia, and a call to decisive action.
Even more concerning, the pattern of poor nontraditional and value added products export showing has barely shifted over the years, suggesting that AGOA’s vast potential remains grossly underutilized, and the country’s export gains, under-beneficiated.
The Dilution of AGOA’s Impact
The gains of AGOA were weakened in recent years when the United States, introduced bilateral tariffs in August 2025 that imposed taxes ranging from 10% to 30% on products that previously entered it jurisdiction duty-free.
For countries like Ghana, this meant that competitiveness in the U.S. market would be eroded, undermining a core benefit of AGOA.
This underscores the reality that AGOA is not a one-way street, requiring African economies to build stronger negotiating positions and present attractive trade value to the united states.
Ghana’s Experience and Challenges under AGOA
Despite Ghana’s eligibility and its access to a vast U.S. market under AGOA, the country has faced several challenges:
The first is Low Utilization Rates: Although AGOA covers over 1000s of products, Ghana’s exports have been concentrated in a narrow band, mainly cocoa derivatives, apparel, and a few agricultural items.
Structural constraints, like high energy costs, weak industrial infrastructure, and logistics bottlenecks make Ghanaian exports less competitive compared to those from Kenya, Ethiopia, and Lesotho, which have stronger apparel and textile value chains.
The third is Limited Private Sector Capacity: Many Ghanaian firms struggle to meet stringent U.S. standards on packaging, quality, and certification, which limits their ability to scale exports.
While this appear to be a challenge, it is equally an opportunity to firm-up quality.
Lastly, Policy Uncertainty: The unpredictable nature of AGOA, renewed several times but always at risk of expiry, creates uncertainty, discouraging long-term investment in export-oriented industries.
Recommendations for Ghana
Diversify Exports Beyond Raw Materials: Ghana should expand into high-value agricultural processing, textiles, and light manufacturing.
Improve Industrial Infrastructure: Reducing energy costs, investing in ports and logistics, and strengthening special economic zones would improve competitiveness.
Strengthen Trade Support Services: Capacity-building programs for SMEs on U.S. regulatory requirements can enhance compliance and scale-up exports.
Forge Strategic Partnerships: Ghana can leverage partnerships with U.S. firms and diaspora investors to improve product quality and market penetration.
Navigating the Uncertainty: Beyond AGOA
With AGOA set to expire in 2025 or only a likely one-year extension being discussed, policy and business actors in Ghana must prepare for a post-AGOA era. These would include;
Policy-Level Actions such as:
Bilateral Trade Agreements: Ghana should actively engage the U.S. for a more permanent bilateral trade framework that replaces the uncertainty of AGOA.
Leverage the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA): As the host of the AfCFTA Secretariat, Ghana should champion regional value chains that strengthen bargaining power with the U.S. and other global markets.
Negotiate Tariff Relief: Ghana’s diplomacy should focus on securing sector-specific tariff waivers for key exports like cocoa products, textiles, and processed foods.
Business-Level Actions
Market Diversification: Ghanaian exporters must reduce overdependence on the U.S. by expanding into European, Asian, and other African markets.
Value Addition and Branding: Instead of exporting raw cocoa or shea, Ghana should aggressively push for branded chocolate, processed shea cosmetics, and finished apparel. Business actors must leverage on a relatively stronger local currency to invest in manufacturing.
Private Sector Investment: Businesses should invest in quality improvements, certifications, and supply chain efficiency to remain competitive regardless of U.S. trade preferences.
Finally, AGOA has offered Ghana and Africa significant opportunities for trade and development. However, its benefits have been undercut by structural weaknesses and recent U.S. trade policies. As its expiration looms, Ghana faces a pivotal moment.
The path forward requires policy agility, private sector innovation, and strategic international partnerships.
Ghana should take decisive steps now by diversifying exports, strengthening industrial capacity, and preparing for life after AGOA; in doing so, the country will not only cushion itself from potential shocks but also position itself as a leading African exporter in a global economy that is rapidly shifting.
About the author:
Gilbert Atsu Torsu is an Agribusiness Consultant with a decade experience in agriculture related matters in west Africa. He is also the head of policy and research with the Chamber of Agribusiness Ghana.
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DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.