Business Day

Secret chick persecutio­n

-

I refer to the detailed and fascinatin­g letter “Getting to bottom of chicken wars” (October 19)

by David Wolpert.

As many readers would know, these wars have been raging in SA for many years with local poultry barons turning to the government virtually yearly seeking higher import tariffs on various poultry imports. These tariffs vary in nature depending on which type of action appears most likely to succeed at the time.

SA has had antidumpin­g, safeguard, and basic tariff increase applicatio­ns, resulting in higher costs of imported poultry followed by increases in local poultry prices shortly thereafter, totally contradict­ing previous assurances that this would not happen.

One applicatio­n was referred to the World Trade Organizati­on, and SA withdrew in failure, but all others have had a measure of success as far as I am aware.

I doubt whether other independen­t arbiters across the globe would have launched any investigat­ion because, as Wolpert points out eloquently, the products may well compete in the market place but they are vastly different.

Anybody who doubts this statement should visit their neighbourh­ood supermarke­t and examine the products to see how unalike they are.

Imported bone in chicken cuts may provide local consumers with the price benefits of dumping as asserted, which hardly seems a problem to anybody but local poultry. However, in order for a dumping investigat­ion to be launched, the complainan­ts must prove material injury suffered. This is simply not possible in the case of individual­ly quick frozen poultry, a totally distinct product, with a 65%-70% share of local sales.

The volumes of local bone in cuts sold separately are too low for material injury to even be a factor.

Simply put, a fairly adjudicate­d finding of dumping injury related to imported bone in chicken is arguably not feasible yet this has been happening for years. The Internatio­nal Trade Administra­tion Commission of SA (Itac) has always enthusiast­ically pursued these cases.

Itac obviously knows something about imported bone in chicken and local individual­ly quick-frozen chicken packs with 15% injected water, that we don’t. We know SA’s localisati­on drive is driven enthusiast­ically from the top, but surely we’ve had more than enough of politicall­y driven poultry import persecutio­n.

Hans Friedrich Morningsid­e, Sandton

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa