The report also projects that the value of trade in counterfeit and pirated goods could be as high as $991 Billion by 2022.
This is because any market with serious influx of counterfeit goods will support the wider black market, will experience lost genuine employment, discouraged innovation, lost foreign investment and lost tax revenue and reduced economic activities.
And the perpetrators behind this vice have also continued to up their game by faking genuine products as authorities and innovators struggle to curb the menace.
In Kenya alone, the Anti-Counterfeit Authority estimates that one in every four products sold in local markets is fake and more than four million Kenyans are using counterfeit products.
Data from the Kenyan Anti-Counterfeit Authority National Baseline Survey also show that government spends up-to 100 billion KES in fighting the illicit trade where mining, building and construction have been hit hardest.
Beyond the borders, the Anti-Counterfeiting Group (ACG) which has been fighting the menace for over 40 years had intended for 2020 to be a year of great celebration for it’s members but was interrupted by the arrival of Covid-19 pandemic which resulted to far more unimaginable loss, illness and heartache.
Counterfeiting criminals and perpetrators of other forms of illicit trade sought nothing but profit from the dangers and disasters that the entire globe faced.
This resulted to one of the world’s faceless menaces throughout the terrible period, and spread to become a criminal contagion.
Nevertheless organizations including Kenya National Chamber of Commerce and Industry (KNCCI), Kenya Association of Manufacturers (KAM) and Kenya Private Sector Alliance (KEPSA) have continued to voice their concerns against counterfeiting and piracy which are eating into effective and profitable trading for businesses in Kenya.
KNCCI in recognition to efforts by Kenya Bureau of Standards (KEBS) which is branding products with a standard check mark is re-affirming it’s commitment to enhance consumer health, protection, safety and economic interest by enforcing article 46(c) of the Kenyan laws.