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Economy & MarketsSunday, June 28, 2026

Africa seizes China zero-tariff opening as Europe’s China policy stalls

Beijing’s duty-free access for African exporters offers a measurable growth path, while Brussels remains caught in inconclusive debates over de-risking.

Beijing’s extension of zero-tariff access to the bulk of African economies, implemented last month, has recast the commercial landscape for the continent’s exporters. For a cocoa grower in Côte d’Ivoire, a sesame producer in Ethiopia or a garment manufacturer in Lesotho, the removal of tariff walls into a market of 1.4 billion consumers translates immediately into higher margins and a new calculus for scaling output. The move arrives as Africa is projected to grow 4 per cent in 2026, yet headlines mask the need for structural transformation—investment, value addition and diversified export markets—if that number is to endure.

The contrast with Europe’s approach to China is stark. At its latest European Council, the EU elevated its trade deficit to a “global macroeconomic imbalance” and tasked the Commission with engaging Beijing “with an emphasis on results”—an implicit acknowledgement that years of de-risking, anti-subsidy probes, and tariff threats have yielded neither reduced dependency nor restored competitiveness. Brussels has yet to resolve its own 2019 framing of China as simultaneously partner, competitor and systemic rival, leaving policy adrift between engagement and confrontation. Viewed from African capitals, however, external partnerships are being layered without such diagnostic paralysis. At the 10th Nigeria-EU Business Forum, EU and ECOWAS officials jointly pitched the country as the gateway to West Africa’s 400 million consumers and the AfCFTA’s 1.4 billion-strong market, inviting investors to look beyond Lagos to a continental platform.

The external moves are grounded in concrete domestic initiatives. Nigeria is distributing fertilisers and certified seeds to nearly half a million smallholders through traceable programmes expected to add 2.6 million tonnes of food; in Kano, TELA drought-tolerant and pest-resistant maize is being rolled out with farmer sensitisation and scientific safety assurances. Kenya is digitising tax filing via WhatsApp and USSD to widen the revenue base, while its agricultural research agency, KALRO, advances improved crop varieties and vaccine development. ECOWAS has just validated a Gender and Trade Strategy that targets the informal payments, checkpoints and credit gaps plaguing women cross-border traders, complemented by humanitarian investments in water and livelihoods in Ghana. In South Asia, Bangladesh’s record budget of 9.38 trillion taka is being framed as a policy experiment: a flat-rate tax base expansion, plans to separate revenue policy from collection, and a dynamic social registry to learn from implementation.

The next factual markers are the formal adoption of the ECOWAS gender strategy and its first field actions; harvest data from Nigeria’s fertiliser interventions; and bilateral trade figures that will show how swiftly African enterprises exploit China’s zero-tariff lanes. For Europe, the benchmark remains a public accounting of which dependencies “de-risking” has actually reduced—a tally the Commission has never produced.

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 3 languages

32%
ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Chinese pressSub-Saharan African press
Chinese press/ State
TriumphPragmatism

China provides Africa with zero-tariff access, strengthening a strategic partnership while Europe struggles with ineffective policies toward Beijing. African leaders seize the opportunity to accelerate their growth, showing that cooperation with China is now a concrete development platform. Europe's setback, in contrast, reveals its inability to adapt to a new global economic order.

Sub-Saharan African press/ Anglophone
DetachmentPragmatism

African media focus on domestic agricultural initiatives, such as distributing fertilizers and seeds to improve food security. The geopolitical narrative of China and Europe is absent: attention is on local government programs and rural productivity. The continent's growth is seen as resulting from domestic efforts, not external trade deals.

Broaden your view

Read more
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Upd. 07:04 PM3 languages · 6 outlets
PreviousEconomy & MarketsNext
6 outlets|3 languages|3 min read
Sunday, June 28, 2026

Africa seizes China zero-tariff opening as Europe’s China policy stalls

Beijing’s duty-free access for African exporters offers a measurable growth path, while Brussels remains caught in inconclusive debates over de-risking.

Beijing’s extension of zero-tariff access to the bulk of African economies, implemented last month, has recast the commercial landscape for the continent’s exporters. For a cocoa grower in Côte d’Ivoire, a sesame producer in Ethiopia or a garment manufacturer in Lesotho, the removal of tariff walls into a market of 1.4 billion consumers translates immediately into higher margins and a new calculus for scaling output. The move arrives as Africa is projected to grow 4 per cent in 2026, yet headlines mask the need for structural transformation—investment, value addition and diversified export markets—if that number is to endure.\n\nThe contrast with Europe’s approach to China is stark. At its latest European Council, the EU elevated its trade deficit to a “global macroeconomic imbalance” and tasked the Commission with engaging Beijing “with an emphasis on results”—an implicit acknowledgement that years of de-risking, anti-subsidy probes, and tariff threats have yielded neither reduced dependency nor restored competitiveness. Brussels has yet to resolve its own 2019 framing of China as simultaneously partner, competitor and systemic rival, leaving policy adrift between engagement and confrontation. Viewed from African capitals, however, external partnerships are being layered without such diagnostic paralysis. At the 10th Nigeria-EU Business Forum, EU and ECOWAS officials jointly pitched the country as the gateway to West Africa’s 400 million consumers and the AfCFTA’s 1.4 billion-strong market, inviting investors to look beyond Lagos to a continental platform.\n\nThe external moves are grounded in concrete domestic initiatives. Nigeria is distributing fertilisers and certified seeds to nearly half a million smallholders through traceable programmes expected to add 2.6 million tonnes of food; in Kano, TELA drought-tolerant and pest-resistant maize is being rolled out with farmer sensitisation and scientific safety assurances. Kenya is digitising tax filing via WhatsApp and USSD to widen the revenue base, while its agricultural research agency, KALRO, advances improved crop varieties and vaccine development. ECOWAS has just validated a Gender and Trade Strategy that targets the informal payments, checkpoints and credit gaps plaguing women cross-border traders, complemented by humanitarian investments in water and livelihoods in Ghana. In South Asia, Bangladesh’s record budget of 9.38 trillion taka is being framed as a policy experiment: a flat-rate tax base expansion, plans to separate revenue policy from collection, and a dynamic social registry to learn from implementation.\n\nThe next factual markers are the formal adoption of the ECOWAS gender strategy and its first field actions; harvest data from Nigeria’s fertiliser interventions; and bilateral trade figures that will show how swiftly African enterprises exploit China’s zero-tariff lanes. For Europe, the benchmark remains a public accounting of which dependencies “de-risking” has actually reduced—a tally the Commission has never produced.

Source divergence

Economy & Markets · 6 outlets · 3 languages

32%Medium

How sources tell the same facts differently.

How They Split

Favorable20%
Neutral80%

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 3 languages

ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Chinese pressSub-Saharan African press
Chinese press/ State
TriumphPragmatism

China provides Africa with zero-tariff access, strengthening a strategic partnership while Europe struggles with ineffective policies toward Beijing. African leaders seize the opportunity to accelerate their growth, showing that cooperation with China is now a concrete development platform. Europe's setback, in contrast, reveals its inability to adapt to a new global economic order.

Sub-Saharan African press/ Anglophone
DetachmentPragmatism

African media focus on domestic agricultural initiatives, such as distributing fertilizers and seeds to improve food security. The geopolitical narrative of China and Europe is absent: attention is on local government programs and rural productivity. The continent's growth is seen as resulting from domestic efforts, not external trade deals.

This story appeared in

6 outlets · 3 languages

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