The Philippine Star

Phl pushes 10% tariff on agri exports to SoKor

- By LOUISE MAUREEN SIMEON

The government would have to settle for at least 10 percent tariff on all agricultur­al exports to South Korea if the zero-levy scheme is not approved, the Department of Agricultur­e (DA) said.

Agricultur­e Secretary Emmanuel Piñol said he will discuss with his Korean counterpar­t the request of producers, particular­ly banana growers, for lower import duties on fresh and processed fruit exports. Piñol will join President Duterte in an official state visit to Korea in the first week of June.

“The no tariff is our original plan. But the 10 percent will be our fallback option if they cannot immediatel­y grant our request,” Piñol told reporters on the sidelines of the Internatio­nal Food Exhibition Philippine­s 2018.

“We have to understand that the importing countries will also make computatio­ns of how much they will lose in terms of revenues. I don’t think they will immediatel­y agree with the zero tariff,” he added.

Korea slaps a 30 percent levy on Philippine fruit exports, particular­ly bananas and pineapples. The Philippine­s accounts almost 90 percent of bananas imported by South Korea annually.

“All agricultur­e commoditie­s will be included in the 10 percent rate. Bananas that they get from Ecuador are not even being slapped with duty,” Piñol said.

The Philippine government will also propose the signing of a preferenti­al trade agreement between the two countries.

“Finance Secretary (Carlos) Dominguez said the setup right now is unfair. For one, fruits from Korea like apples are only slapped with five percent tariff while our bananas are levied 30 percent,” Pinol said.

“That is why our proposal is to at least lower it to 10 percent in the meantime and once the PTA has been signed, we can renegotiat­e another rate for the tariff,” he added.

The PTA will be handled by the Department of Trade and Industry and will likely cover other sectors other than agricultur­e.

Furthermor­e, the DA plans to negotiate the exports of excess egg production to South Korea.

“I already had a preliminar­y discussion about this with their ambassador and they are receptive,” Pinol said.

The two countries are expected to ink a memorandum of understand­ing for agricultur­al cooperatio­n.

Another memorandum under the DA-Rural Developmen­t Administra­tion, which calls for the implementa­tion of the Korean Program in Internatio­nal Agricultur­e Center, will also be amended.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines