Dr. Guevera Yao
U.S. Chamber of Commerce, Vice President, Africa

Dr. Guevera Yao is the Vice President, Africa for the U.S.-Africa Business Center at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce. Yao oversees programmes and policy initiatives to broaden commercial relationships between the U.S. and African markets. He advises Chamber’s Fortune 500 companies, Small & Medium Enterprises (SMEs), and government leaders to deepen and expand trade & investment opportunities between the U.S. and markets across Africa. He also leads a number of initiatives within the U.S. Chamber’s U.S.-Africa Business Centre, including the Trade and Investment Task Forces, the U.S.-Angola Working Group, U.S.-Africa Digital Innovation Competition for African Start-ups, the U.S. Chamber – African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) Secretariat Joint Working Group, and the high-level dialogue between International Oil Companies (IOCs) and the Africa Responsible Energy Steering Committee  (RESC).

Yao is an economist and policy expert with over 20 years of experience in economic integration, regional infrastructure development, and trade and finance for several developing countries. He worked as Coordinator for the ECOWAS Regional Development Program for 8 years, based in Abuja, Nigeria. Prior to ECOWAS, Yao worked as a senior technical advisor for the governments of Tanzania and Namibia to provide policy guidance on the design and enactment of intergovernmental fiscal transfer systems for subnational governments.

He worked as a senior research associate for the International Centre for Public Policy at Georgia State University, where he contributed to several analytical studies. He also provided consultancy services for the Urban Institute and the World Bank on urban service delivery in South Asia.

Dr. Yao is a MCC Advisory Council member and a Board Member of the ACDI /VOCA. He holds a Master’s and Ph.D. in Economics from the Andrew Young School of Policy Studies at Georgia State University. He is fluent in French, English, and several African languages.

Congratulations to him on recently becoming a member of the Sub-Saharan Africa Advisory Committee for Export-Import Bank of the United States. Established by Congress, the Sub-Saharan Africa Advisory Committee advises EXIM on policies that advance America-first financing and expand opportunities for U.S.-manufactured goods and services in Sub-Saharan Africa.