Although the Biden Administration is pushing quasi-trade agreements like APEP and IPEF, they are only expected to impact the movement of goods and services on the margin, if at all. Both President Biden and former President Donald Trump recognize that most Americans now believe that the U.S. loses more from global trade than it gains. One regional exception is Africa, where the White House has now scheduled the seventh round of negotiations on a U.S.-Kenya Strategic Trade and Investment Partnership. Work on a similar agreement with South Africa is set to restart, and the State Department is calling on the U.S. Congress to reauthorize the African Growth and Opportunity Act “immediately.” But those initiatives are not economically...