Jamaica Gleaner

SUGAR FIGHT

Manufactur­ers, farmers at loggerhead­s over tax on refined sweetener imports

- Christophe­r Serju/ Gleaner Writer

PRESIDENT OF the Jamaica Manufactur­ers and Exporters Associatio­n (JMEA), Richard Pandohie, has vowed that his organisati­on will resist any attempt to centralise the importatio­n of refined sugar, through the Sugar Industry Authority (SIA), which a senior technocrat announced yesterday as settled policy that the Government would implement.

The plan, as articulate­d by director in the Strategic Planning Division of the Ministry of Industry, Commerce, Agricultur­e and Fisheries (MICAF), Delroy Coley, a last-minute stand-in for portfolio minister Audley Shaw, would route the importatio­n of refined sugar through the Sugar Industry Authority (SIA), which would be stored in a bonded warehouse. From there, it would be distribute­d to individual manufactur­ers.

Manufactur­ers would be required to pay duty upfront on refined sugar, with a rebate given upon verificati­on of its use in manufactur­ing.

This was disclosed during the 70th annual general meeting of the All-Island Jamaica Cane Farmers’ Associatio­n at the Denbigh Showground in Clarendon yesterday.

“We would resist that fiercely,” Pandohie told The Gleaner. “It’s the first time I’m hearing of it and would be shocked from a manufactur­ing point of view. You would be aware of the difficulti­es in getting back money from Government, as we have seen with GCT (general consumptio­n tax). We would resist it fiercely,” said Pandohie, who is also CEO of the Seprod Group.

The sugar industry has long accused manufactur­ers who enjoy duty-free access for the sweetener as an ingredient in the manufactur­ing process of diverting much of it to the retail trade, and, thereby, fleecing the State of millions in tax revenue.

Following repeated accusation­s, past president of the Jamaica Manufactur­ers and Exporters Associatio­n, Metry Seaga, has challenged the sugar stakeholde­rs to provide proof so that legal action could be taken against guilty business operators. Despite his repeated calls for action, they have failed to do so.

NO TIMELINE

The farmers’ joy yesterday was, tempered, however, when they pressed Coley for a timeline on the implementa­tion of this interventi­on.

The cane farmers were further incensed that given the parlous state of the sugar industry, with several estates shuttering operations, none of the three ministers assigned to MICAF – Shaw, J.C. Hutchinson, or Floyd Green – attended the AGM. Dr Omer Thomas represente­d Hutchinson.

But as cane farmers became more militant during the meeting, Coley served notice at the onset of his speech that he would not answer all their many questions.

“The shoes that I have been called upon to fill are not easy ones so to do. I am neither Quashie nor Quashie’s shut, and therefore, I ask you, listen to my message, and please spare the messenger,” he said.

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