Via partnership agreements, the EU provides African countries with access to its markets, and asks for compliance with a given set of good governance norms and procedures. While the EU markets are significant for African countries, African markets are not significant for the EU: This asymmetric relationship should give the EU the power to “convince” the African countries to adopt better governance practices. Results from panel data regression analyses indicate that for 34 African countries from 1984-2009, an increase in the intensity of trade and intensity of imports from the EU reduces the level of corruption, but not always with the intensity of exports to the EU. These findings do not provide strong evidence in favor of the idea that the EU has effectively used its asymmetric trade relationship in convincing African countries to adopt better governance practices, but they consistently support alternative rival hypotheses, namely the trade openness and imports-as-market discipline hypotheses.