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Summary Of: AGOA

Saharan African countries would be eligible for AGOA on an annual basis... AGOA provides trade preferences for quota and duty... AGOA expanded market access for... AGOA has resulted in limited successes in some countries... some AGOA countries have begun to export new products to the United States... AGOA remains of critical importance... government is providing technical assistance to AGOA eligible countries to help them benefit from the legislation... AGOA was set to expire in... AGOA Acceleration Act of 2004... AGOA Acceleration Act of 2004... Every year an AGOA Forum is held... and in an AGOA eligible African country in the other years... While AGOA is often synonymous with preferential garment exports... the fact remains that AGOA opens the US market to a large number of African... Some allege that AGOA is in contradiction with... Others claim AGOA encourages fraud by making Chinese and Indian clothing manufacturers label their goods...

Encyclodia Page On: AGOA

These Are Links To Other Documents
| citations | footnotes | inline citations | President George W. Bush signs into law the African Growth and Opportunity Act (AGOA) Acceleration Act of 2004 in the Dwight D. Eisenhower Executive Office Building Tuesday, July 13, 2004. | | George W. Bush | Dwight D. Eisenhower Executive Office Building | 2000 | U.S. Congress | sub-Saharan Africa | United States | President of the United States | Generalized System of Preferences | textile | apparel | Multi Fibre Agreement | China | Lesotho | flowers | Lesotho | Swaziland | Kenya | Madagascar | sanitary | phytosanitary | U.S. Agency for International Development | Accra | Ghana | Gaborone | Botswana | Nairobi | Kenya | 2008 | 2004 | United States Congress | 2015 | WTO | citation needed | citation needed | Categories | 2000 in law | African Development | United States foreign relations legislation | Articles with unsourced statements since August 2007 | All articles with unsourced statements |
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