Nairobi, Kenya – October 12, 2025: Kenya’s President William Ruto assumed the chairmanship of the Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa (COMESA) on October 9, 2025, pledging to advance continental integration through visa liberalization and digital transformation, while Africa confronts the end of preferential U.S. trade access and ongoing dependency on external markets.
Speaking at the 24th COMESA Summit held at Nairobi’s Kenyatta International Convention Centre from October 7-9, 2025, Ruto declared that “the question of continental integration must go beyond trade agreements and shared markets” and “true integration will only be achieved when an African can travel, work, and invest freely anywhere on the continent”. His appointment as COMESA chairperson, taking over from Burundi’s President Evariste Ndayishimiye, comes as African leaders grapple with the September 30, 2025 expiration of the African Growth and Opportunity Act (AGOA).
However, Ruto’s vision for seamless African mobility faces scrutiny based on Kenya’s own policy implementation challenges. Kenya’s “visa-free” policy, announced in January 2024, initially replaced traditional visas with an Electronic Travel Authorization (ETA) system requiring $30 fees and online applications processed within three days. The policy proved controversial, with Kenya dropping 17 places to rank 46th out of 54 African countries in the 2024 Africa Visa Openness Index. Kenya has since revised its approach, eliminating ETA requirements for most African countries by July 2025, though Libya and Somalia remain excluded due to security concerns.
Trade Integration and External Dependencies
The timing of Ruto’s COMESA leadership coincides with significant shifts in global trade arrangements. AGOA’s expiration on September 30, 2025, ended 25 years of duty-free U.S. market access for eligible African countries, immediately imposing higher tariffs on key exports. Kenya’s apparel industry, which exported over $600 million to the U.S. under AGOA in 2024, now faces 28% tariffs, while Madagascar’s textile sector confronts rates as high as 47%.
Africa map showing countries that have signed or ratified regional free movement protocols and outlining specific regional challenges to free movement across the continent
Current trade statistics underscore the continent’s integration challenges. Africa contributes only 3% to global trade, with intra-African commerce accounting for approximately 14-15% of total African trade—significantly lower than other regions. Intra-African trade reached $220.3 billion in 2024, representing a 12.4% increase from 2023’s $196.04 billion, according to Afreximbank data. Within COMESA specifically, intra-regional trade accounts for just 7-10% of the bloc’s total trade.
China has emerged as COMESA’s largest single import source, commanding 15% of regional imports according to COMESA statistics, while the European Union remains the bloc’s primary export destination at 36% of total exports. This pattern reflects continued dependence on external markets for both imports and exports, despite integration initiatives.
Digital Transformation and Financial Independence
Ruto’s COMESA agenda emphasizes digital transformation as a pathway to deeper integration, calling for “harmonized digital policies and regulatory frameworks” under the summit theme of “Leveraging Digitalization to Deepen Regional Value Chains for Sustainable and Inclusive Growth”. The strategy includes accelerating adoption of electronic Certificates of Origin and integrated Single Window Systems to facilitate cross-border trade.
More significantly, Ruto announced Kenya’s $100 million additional investment in the Trade and Development Bank (TDB), building on an existing $50 million commitment to Afreximbank. He explicitly criticized Western-dominated financial institutions, stating: “The global financial system remains trapped in the architecture of a bygone era. Institutions such as the IMF and the World Bank, conceived in the aftermath of the Second World War 80 years ago, continue to be dominated by wealthy nations, resulting in persistent inequities and a limited voice for developing countries”.
These African-led financial institutions offer long-term facilities of up to 25 years at interest rates as low as 2%, contrasting with traditional international lending terms. Ruto described institutions like TDB, Afreximbank, and the Africa Finance Corporation as “embodiments of our collective determination to mobilise African capital for African priorities”.
AfCFTA Implementation Progress
The African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA), operational since January 2021, represents the world’s largest free trade area by country participation, connecting 1.3 billion people across 54 countries with a combined GDP of $3.4 trillion. World Bank projections estimate that full AfCFTA implementation could boost Africa’s income by $450 billion by 2035 and lift 30 million people out of extreme poverty.
The agreement targets progressive liberalization of 97% of intra-African tariffs on trade in goods. Early implementation shows modest progress, with intra-African exports projected to increase by 45% by 2045, adding $275.7 billion to cross-border trade value. Manufacturing currently dominates intra-African trade at 46% of exports, followed by food (21%), fuels (20%), and ore/metals (7%).
Implementation Challenges and Domestic Reactions
Despite official enthusiasm, Kenya’s visa policy reversals illustrate broader implementation challenges facing continental integration initiatives. The country’s initial ETA system drew criticism from travel consultants and immigration experts who noted the bureaucratic complexity contradicted visa-free promises. The policy required advance planning that disrupted spontaneous travel and conference attendance common in African business practices.
Kenyan civil society reactions remain mixed. While pan-African organizations like Africans Rising praised visa liberalization efforts as advancing the “borderless Africa agenda”, domestic concerns focus on potential job displacement and increased competition in informal sectors. Some informal sector workers in Nairobi expressed worry about cheaper migrant labor from neighboring countries affecting local employment opportunities.
Social media reactions have been similarly divided. Zimbabwean journalist Hopewell Chin’ono criticized Kenya’s initial policy as deceptive, noting that the ETA system “made travelling more difficult for Africans who didn’t need a visa before”. However, the July 2025 policy revision eliminating ETA requirements for most African countries addressed many of these concerns.
Regional Economic Context
President Ruto’s COMESA chairmanship occurs against a backdrop of uneven economic recovery across the continent. Africa recorded 3.2% growth in 2024, below the pre-pandemic rate of 5%, though merchandise trade rebounded by 13.9% to reach $1.5 trillion. Inflation increased from 18.2% in 2023 to 20.1% in 2024, reflecting persistent economic challenges.
COMESA’s 21 member states seek to accelerate post-pandemic economic recovery while strengthening regional value chains through innovation and digital inclusion. The summit brought together heads of state and government, ministers, and business leaders to address shared challenges including food security, energy access, and trade facilitation.
Future Integration Prospects
Ruto concluded his COMESA acceptance speech with calls for “a COMESA that is digital, dynamic, and deeply inclusive—a bloc that truly reflects the promise of a rising Africa”. The continent faces critical choices about achieving economic sovereignty while navigating competing external relationships with China, the European Union, and the United States.
Kenya’s experience with visa policy implementation—from bureaucratic ETA systems to genuine visa-free access—illustrates both the potential and pitfalls of continental integration efforts. Whether Africa can translate Pan-African rhetoric into effective economic integration while maintaining sovereignty remains the central challenge facing initiatives like the AfCFTA and regional blocs like COMESA.
The success of Ruto’s chairmanship will likely depend on balancing ambitious integration goals with practical implementation realities, addressing both the technical barriers to free movement and trade while managing domestic political concerns about increased regional competition and migration.