Business Day

State ‘needs to shield poultry farmers from cheap imports’

- RAZINA MUNSHI

THE government must come to the aid of SA’s poultry sector through providing long-term support including subsidies, if farmers are to withstand the steep rise in cheap chicken imports.

This is according to Kevin Lovell, CEO of the South African Poultry Associatio­n in an address to its annual Avi Africa conference in Johannesbu­rg yesterday.

Mr Lovell’s comments come as the industry is appealing for protection from Brazilian exports which they consider to be dumping.

Mr Lovell said state interventi­on would have to be on the same principles as its support for the motor industry. “We need a comprehens­ive strategy with long-term support. The state has to be a direct participan­t, otherwise things won’t change.”

SA imported 265-million chickens a year. “That is 265-million chickens that could be grown in SA,” Mr Lovell said.

Poultry imports contribute­d 4% to SA’s trade deficit.

Mr Lovell further said five small and medium-sized farms had closed in the past 18 months, taking 2,000 jobs with them. Larger producers have shed 3,000 jobs.

Government interventi­on was the only way an investment into the local poultry industry could be successful, Mr Lovell said.

However, the South African Associatio­n of Meat Importers and Exporters would support subsidies if they were export-based, according to CEO David Wolpert. He believed better state support would grow SA’s ability to export.

“But we will object to protection­ist policies because we don’t believe they work. The poor are going to end up financing this.”

Mr Lovell conceded to Business Day that locally produced chickens would be more expensive. However, a locally supported poultry industry would bring social benefit to SA by generating new jobs and skills.

Poultry producers were still the largest segment of the local agricultur­al sector. It accounted for 17.4% of all agricultur­al production and 37% of all animal products. Mr Lovell said the industry was already working with several state department­s to develop a strategy to address the growth of the sector. Special attention would have to fall on emerging farmers, who produced a fraction of the output of large producers.

They could not compete and the government would have to consider special exceptions and subsidies for them to survive.

The poultry associatio­n had taken its objections to imported chicken to the Internatio­nal Trade Administra­tion Commission, which gazetted its tariff review applicatio­n last month.

 ?? Picture: THE HERALD ?? ENDANGERED: A worker at a poultry processing plant. The sector is feeling pressure from imports and job losses.
Picture: THE HERALD ENDANGERED: A worker at a poultry processing plant. The sector is feeling pressure from imports and job losses.

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