East Africa Plans To Stop Accepting Second Hand Clothes by 2019
A common observation across many East African
nations is the massive second hand clothes markets which employ
thousands of people and offer cheap clothes to customers.
According to the UN, up to 80% of Africans wear second-hand clothes also known as ‘hand-me-downs’.
These clothes are blamed for killing local textile industries in Kenya, Uganda, Ethiopia, and Rwanda forcing the East African Community to call for a ban on their importation by 2019.
“It
is not yet time. It is a good idea. It is part of governments’
planning, but not all plans can be effected at once,” Kabuka Adams,
General Secretary Owino Market Traders Association in Uganda observed.
An argument also supported by some business analysts that suggest that
instead of phasing out importation at once, the region should import used clothes as it develops its own textile indust.
UN
estimates that South Korea and Canada combined have at one time
exported $59m worth of used clothes to Tanzania while Kenya imported
used clothes worth $42 from the UK alone.If
such money is used in developing local textile industries, it would
boost the economy of the concerned countries and the region as a whole.
“Once
we get to a point where we do production locally, then the economy
grows and can actually benefit everybody,” Nunu Mugyenyi co-founder Bold
in Africa said in the CNN interview.
Introducing high tax is one sure way to ensure that second hand clothes competes fairly with those produced locally.
Moreover,
it will help EAC avoid unnecessary frictions with Africa Growth and
Opportunity Act (Agoa) whose leaders were not pleased with the regional
hub proposal to end a multimillion-dollar business through the ban.Below are statistical data show how Eat African Countries uses second hand clothes from United States for 17 years
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