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Journal Article

Patterns of Global and Regional Integration in the East African Community

Authors

  • Krantz
  • S.

Publication Date

DOI

10.1007/s10290-024-00558-0

JEL Classification

F14 F15 O11

Key Words

GVCs

RVCs

EAC

Trade

Regional integration

Economic development

Related Topics

Africa

Using detailed global trade and novel Multi-Region Input–Output data, this paper examines the East African Community’s (EAC) global and regional integration through trade, global, and regional value chains (GVCs and RVCs). With surgical attention to detail, the first part of the paper dissects key patterns and trends of EAC members’ participation in global and regional trade and production networks at the aggregate, bilateral, sectoral, and bilateral-sectoral levels. The second part then provides causal reduced-form evidence for the economic benefits of EAC integration through trade, GVCs, and RVCs at the sector level. Findings imply that the region is moderately integrated into GVCs and RCVs but shows no overall trend towards greater integration. Regional integration is advancing in agriculture and food processing, and Kenya is becoming a more dominant regional supplier of manufactures. Integration through trade and GVCs positively affects economic development in the region, particularly deeper forward GVC linkages in manufacturing. Deepening regional trade and forward linkages yields additional economic benefits vis-a-vis global linkages.

Kiel Institute Expert

  • Sebastian Krantz, Ph.D.
    Kiel Institute Junior Fellow

More Publications

Subject Dossiers

  • Aerial view of an African village, solar-powered well in the center

    Africa

Research Center

  • International Development