China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Extra sugar tariff on the way

Move follows six-month probe revealing serious damage to domestic industry

- By ZHONG NAN zhongnan@chinadaily.com.cn

tons in 2015.

China will start to levy a safeguards tariff on sugar imports after a six-month investigat­ion, in order to protect the domestic sugar industry and stabilize the market, the Ministry of Commerce said on Monday.

Based on the results of the investigat­ion and suggestion­s made by the ministry, the Tariff Commission of the State Council decided to collect an extra 45 percent tariff on top of the current 50 percent duty for out-of-quota sugar imports for this fiscal year. The anti-dumping duty will be reduced to 40 percent in the next year and then 35 percent in the following year.

Safeguard measures are defined as “emergency” actions with respect to increased imports of particular products, where such imports have caused or threaten to cause serious injury to the World Trade Organizati­on member’s domestic industry, according to WTO rules.

The Tariff Commission of the State Council is responsibl­e for handling adjustment­s

China’s sugar imports

made to and interpreta­tion of tariff headings, tariff lines and tariff rates of customs tariffs and the table of tariff rates of import duties of entry articles, and their implementa­tion, subject to approval by the State Council.

“Domestic demand for sugar has been disturbed by foreign sugar, damaging the supply-demand relationsh­ip in the country,” said Jia Zhiren, president of the Beijingbas­ed China Sugar Associatio­n.

Under WTO rules, China conducts a tariff-rate quota and State trading of sugar imports. To further open the market, the Ministry of Commerce incorporat­ed non-quota sugar into the automatic import license management system in November 2014.

“Soaring imports are a result of foreign sugar costing less,” said Jia. “Even with all taxes included, imported sugar is still cheaper than homegrown products.”

The ministry began to investigat­e this case in September 2016, after receiving an applicatio­n from the sugar associatio­n of the Guangxi Zhuang autonomous region for a safeguard measure investigat­ion on behalf of the whole country’s sugar mills, sugarcane and sugar beet farmers in July.

Customs data showed from 2011 to 2015, China’s sugar imports have jumped from 2.92 million metric tons to a record 4.85 million tons, accounting for almost onethird of domestic production.

Ren Changqing, a professor at the center of futures and financial derivative­s at China Agricultur­al University in Beijing, said China must further adjust its subsidy policies for farm products such as sugar, soybeans and cotton by offering flexible price subsidies for State reserves to match internatio­nal prices.

China is a large sugar-producing country with more than 14 million tons of annual output, involving around 40 million sugar farmers, especially in sugar-producing regions including the Guangxi Zhuang and Xinjiang Uygur autonomous regions, as well as Yunnan, Guangdong and Hainan provinces.

Meanwhile, China is also a large sugar importer and has ranked first in terms of sugar imports globally for many years.

1.77

 ?? A QING / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? An employee arranges sugar on the shelf at a supermarke­t in Beijing. China’s sugar imports rose to a record high of 4.85 million metric
A QING / FOR CHINA DAILY An employee arranges sugar on the shelf at a supermarke­t in Beijing. China’s sugar imports rose to a record high of 4.85 million metric

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States