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US tariff decision a ‘wake-up call’ for Africa – UNDP

Published on April 11, 2025 at 01:23 PM

The United Nations Assistant Secretary General and United Nations Development Programme, UNDP, Regional Director for Africa, Ahunna Eziakonwa, has described the recent global tariffs by the United States as a wake-up call for Africa to go beyond foreign aids.

Eziakonwa stated this during a visit to Channels Television’s Headquarters in Lagos where she spoke in an exclusive interview.

According to her, the technicalities of foreign aids have been a haggle for countries like Nigeria aiming to achieve the sustainable goals, suggesting a focus on the non-oil sector as a way out.

“What is happening now globally is a wake-up call for Africa because what is making the achievement of the SDG that much more difficult, yes there has been covid, yes there has been a lot of financial turbulence, but the fact that we have not been able to go beyond aide to really prioritise things like structured transformation that allows us to add value to our raw materials so that our Africa is not just exporting raw materials rather than creating industries that will create jobs, that is the one that needs to be addressed urgently.

“And the current tariff situation pushes us even harder because you can’t just be an oil economy anymore, the volatility is too much, you can crash at any moment when the prices go down. So, you have to be forced to look at the non-oil sector, that forces you as a country to now say, ‘where are the investments that we need to industrialise, to do a little bit more manufacturing,”; Eziakonwa said.

DAILY POST reports that in early April 2025, the United States significantly increased tariffs on Chinese imports, escalating trade tensions between the two nations.

, citing China’s “lack of respect”; in trade relations.

Additionally, a 20% “fentanyl tariff”; was imposed on specific imports, bringing the total tariffs on certain Chinese products to 145%.

In retaliation, , effective April 12, 2025, a move that mirrored the US tariff rates and intensified the ongoing trade conflict.

The US also imposed a 14% tariff on most imports from Nigeria, a move it said was part of a broader strategy to address trade imbalances. It has, however, temporarily paused the 14% tariff.

Meanwhile, on April 9, President Donald Trump announced a 90-day suspension of the reciprocal tariffs affecting 60 countries, including Nigeria.

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