The Mercury

CRYPTIC CROSSWORD

- EDWARD WEST edward.west@inl.co.za

ACROSS

1 Snap decision on a question of race? (5,6)

9 Serve up (3)

10 Go too far across a stretch of water (9)

11 Hotel employees a long time in extra thought (5)

13 Begin the dance, like an unrestrict­ed puppy? (4,3)

14 One inside wards off evil spirits (6)

16 Take another look at a critical report? (6)

18 Refined male fish? (7) 19 Possible range of emotion (5)

20 Clearly express a writer’s work? (4,5)

21 Had a meal from a packet of dates (3)

22 On the verge of retirement? (5,3,3)

DOWN

2 A centre of revolution (3) 3 They may make a stool (5) 4 Weak charge has a miserable finish (6)

5 Hastened up with speed to tell the tale (7)

6 Secretly watching for the fish that’s due (9)

7 It could lead to a lassie’s downfall, she’s only young (4,2,1,4)

8 Employee in removal business? (5,6)

12 Reg is wrong to promise fruit (9)

15 An obstinate person had dire trouble (3-4)

17 Cancelled a surprise order for the hairdresse­r! (3,3) 19 Poisonous creature seen in summer (5)

21 One gives superlativ­e service (3)

THE IMPORT duty on sugar was amended downwards on Friday to R4 148.50 a ton from R5 277.50 a ton, but sugar importers have questioned the selective use of the duty formula.

The Associatio­n of South African Sugar Importers (Asasi) said on Friday that the organisati­on was briefing its legal team against the government department­s overseeing the tariffs, because the formula had not been implemente­d in the past 34 weeks, as it should have.

“Normally a change of duty takes four to six weeks from the triggering of the formula that is implemente­d by the SA Revenue Services (Sars),” Asasi chairperso­n Chris Engelbrech­t said in a statement on Friday.

“It gets approved by ITAC, then signed off by the Minister of Trade and Industry, then passed on to the Minister of Finance for approval and implementa­tion by Sars,” he said.

The first trigger in the formula was 34 weeks ago, at R3 646 and the formula was triggered again a R4 148 on week 14.

Three weeks ago the formula was triggered at R3 371.

“So the lower duty was totally ignored and the higher duty of R4 148.50 per ton was implemente­d,” Engelbrech­t said. He said exactly the same happened last year, the lower duty was not applied, but bypassed to apply the higher duties.

On February 1, 2021, Asasi had a meeting with the office of the Minister of Trade and Industry and requested the duty to be implemente­d. “Little did we know that they bypassed the requested duty illegally and applied for the next higher duty. We are very disappoint­ed in the system,” he said.

The duty was based on the world price of sugar, which is about $462 a ton currently. Added to the final price for consumers are freight at $60 (about R921.86), clearing charges at R400 a ton, which bring the port price to R8 355 a ton at an exchange rate of R15.24 to the dollar.

“On top of this the importer has to pay R4148 import duty to give us a landed price or R12504. Should you add R200 handling and R300 profit margin, that means the selling price is R13 003,” said Engelbrech­t. He questioned why the industry needed more protection if they were selling sugar for R1 000 and more below that price?

“The sugar industry should improve their efficiency, our consumers are paying R12 000 per ton instead of R7 000 per ton like the average price is all over the world,” he said.

Engelbrech­t said any imported sugar selling for below R12 800 per ton was most probably because duty was not paid, sometimes by declaring it as rice when importing.

Some importers also falsely exported the sugar by sending only the documents through the border. Others import through Namibia, which was also illegal as Namibia was part of the Southern African Customs Union and have the same custom duties.

The sugar import tariff is administer­ed by the Sars.

The South African Sugar Industry Associatio­n executive director Trix Trikam said they were not in a position to speculate whether the decline in tariffs would result in consumers paying a lower price for sugar.

He said a combinatio­n of supply and demand dynamics, as well as speculator activity was driving internatio­nal sugar prices upwards, which had led to the reduction in tariffs.

Sars had not replied to Business Report queries by the time of publicatio­n.

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