In April 2025, the Trump administration adopted a sweeping tariff regime targeting imports from nearly 190 countries. Under Executive Order 14257, a universal ad valorem tariff of 10% was applied, accompanied by additional country‑ and sector-specific tariffs ranging from 11% up to 50% for many developing countries including a number of African exporters. These measures were justified as a response to what Washington described as “large and persistent trade deficits” and as necessary for U.S. economic and national security.
The November 2025 U‑turn : Tariff exemptions on key agricultural imports
On November 14, 2025, the White House announced a revision of the reciprocal-tariff scope : more than 200 agricultural products would now be exempted from the additional tariffs imposed earlier effectively restoring duty-free (or near–duty-free) access for those goods. This decision targets items that the U.S. does not sufficiently produce domestically including coffee, bananas, cocoa, tropical fruits, spices, certain meats and juices there by aiming to reduce pressure on food prices for American consumers.
What this means for African exporters
For African nations producing cocoa, coffee, tropical fruits, spices and other high-demand commodities, the tariff rollback represents a golden window. For several years, the volume of African agricultural exports to the U.S. has been rising steadily. According to a recent report, U.S. imports of African agricultural goods increased on average by 6.05% per year from USD 3.13 billion in 2020 to about USD 3.96 billion in 2024. The tariff relief could therefore help sustain or even accelerate this upward trend in 2025 especially for products like cocoa, coffee, fruits and spices from sub‑Saharan Africa from countries such as Ivory Coast , Ghana, Kenya, Madagascar, among others.
But structural headwinds remain notably the end of AGOA
However, the context is more complex than a simple “tariff holiday.” The preferential access granted by AGOA expired on September 30, 2025 removing a long‑standing competitive advantage enjoyed by many African exporters. Without AGOA, the general U.S. Most Favoured Nation (MFN) tariffs now compounded by the country- and sector-specific tariffs introduced in 2025 carry significantly higher costs for many African goods, especially in light manufacturing, agro-food processing, textiles, and apparel. some analyses expect African light-manufacturing exports to the United States to shrink with projections of an 8 % drop by 2029, compared with a scenario where AGOA had been renewed. Thus, while agricultural commodities may benefit from the latest tariff exemptions, exporters of textiles, processed food, and other value-added sectors remain vulnerable unless a new agreement or arrangement replaces AGOA soon.
