Livestock Imports Cost Africa Billions Highlighting Policy Gaps

Written by on March 12, 2026

The African continent faces a significant economic challenge, spending over Sh1.3 trillion (approximately $10 billion) annually on livestock and livestock products. This substantial outflow of capital occurs despite the continent possessing extensive animal resources, prompting debate among trade experts and policymakers regarding systemic issues hindering the agricultural sector’s growth. Rising demand for protein and processed animal goods has highlighted a disconnect between the continent’s potential and its trade performance.

For African economies, this deficit represents a loss of industrial opportunity, employment, and food security. Recent consultations in Naivasha, Kenya, indicate that the core issue is not a lack of livestock, but rather failures in policy implementation and regional coordination. Fragmented regulations, inconsistent standards, and reliance on informal trade routes are reportedly subsidizing foreign producers while local farmers struggle to access regional markets. The trade imbalance—Sh1.3 trillion in imports versus Sh490.2 billion ($3.8 billion) in exports—underscores an unoptimized industrial sector.

The Paradox of Potential vs. Performance

African nations routinely export raw hides and skins at a low value, then import finished products like footwear and upholstery at a premium. This cycle impedes domestic manufacturing and keeps local producers at the bottom of the value chain. This situation was discussed at a technical consultation convened by the African Union Inter-African Bureau for Animal Resources (AU-IBAR) in Naivasha. Veterinary authorities, customs officials, and traders noted that while the region has significant animal populations, a lack of sanitary and phytosanitary (SPS) alignment and fragmented customs procedures make trade with overseas partners easier than trade with neighboring countries.

The Cost of Fragmentation

The lack of harmonized trade policies marginalizes pastoralists, who manage a significant portion of the continent’s cattle, from the formal economy. Despite regional and continental agreements, cross-border livestock movement remains governed by informal arrangements lacking transparency and security. These informal corridors, vital for the livelihoods of millions of pastoralists, do not provide the stability or scale needed to meet urban market demand for safe, processed animal products.

Trade experts warn that the current framework leaves the region vulnerable to external price shocks. Disruptions to global supply chains expose African nations to rising costs, which are passed on to consumers. By failing to integrate markets, African countries are exporting jobs and economic stability while importing inflation and food insecurity. A transition to a more integrated livestock economy is now a critical macroeconomic imperative.

Local Realities: The Kenyan Context

Kenya, like many of its neighbors, faces this complex situation. While the country has made progress in livestock research and vaccine production, the high cost of production, particularly animal feed, remains a significant obstacle. Feed accounts for up to 70 percent of livestock production costs, and reliance on imported raw materials like maize germ, soybean meal, and sunflower cake leaves local farmers vulnerable to global price fluctuations.

Small-scale farmers, who dominate production, struggle to compete with cheaper imported finished products. This has led to calls for the government to waive import duties on essential feed inputs and invest in domestic manufacturing capacity. Without such interventions, the gap between production costs and market prices will widen, potentially pushing more smallholder farmers out of business and increasing import reliance.

Kenya’s path forward involves shifting from livestock keeping to livestock processing. This requires political will and a radical overhaul of the regulatory environment to enable local entrepreneurs to navigate challenges related to quality control, packaging, and logistics. Until these barriers are removed, the continent’s livestock resources will remain underutilized, overshadowed by import dependency.

The Sh1.3 trillion import bill represents a call for structural change. Whether African nations can overcome fragmented regulatory borders to build a cohesive market that prioritizes its own citizens remains to be seen, and will determine if the continent continues to experience economic underdevelopment or begins to harness its own resources.


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