Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Poultry producers concerned over pricing formula proposed twice in 2013 and 2014 budgets

- By Bandula Sirimanna

Despite the government’s move of introducin­g a pricing formula replacing price control on chicken through a 2014 budget proposal, the viability of poultry industry is at stake due to its dependency on feed prices, as it is the dominant production cost, leading poultry industrial­ists said.

The very same proposal of a pricing formula was made in the 2013 budget but it was not properly implemente­d as the complicate­d formula involves so many sectors, they revealed.

The government is again proposing a pricing formula without clarifying the modalities of calculatin­g the new formula, they said, adding that the removal of price controls on poultry is welcomed by the industry but they have doubts on the implementa­tion of a pricing formula based on cost structure introduced twice from two different budgets for 2013 and 2014.

Yakooth Naleem, Chairman, Standing Committee on Dairy and Livestock at the National Chamber of Commerce of Sri Lanka, told the Business Times, the industry would have preferred no price control whatsoever and instead the authoritie­s could have resorted to control supplies to protect the interests of the consumers since this would have been a faster way to give relief to both producers and consumers.

Mr. Naleem, also Bairaha Group Managing Director and joint coordinato­r of the Poultry Producers Forum, said in any case the industry expects the authoritie­s to implement early the proposal contained in the 2014 budget to give much needed relief to the producers of chicken in the form of a higher price to reflect cost escalation.

In regard to support producers to export chicken and eggs, again the producers expect early action by authoritie­s to implement the proposal in the budget so that the excess supplies in the market can be reduced and encourage feed millers buy substantia­l volume of maize and other raw materials from the Maha crop from the farmers.

Mr. Naleem said it is the feed costs basically which is eating up all the profits and to raise a healthy chicken it is the feed that is essential so when the basic feed cost is high the farmers are pushed into a situation to increase the prices.

Another factor for the increase in cost of production of poultry products was the devaluatio­n of the rupee, increased electricit­y tariffs, labour and transporta­tion costs.

He noted that poultry producers have to pay VAT, NBT and income tax excluding other duties and indirect taxes, in particular tax ( CESS) on maize and other consumable­s, which are also substantia­l in amount.

The industry is paying Rs. 6 billion per year as VAT alone to the Treasury and the government should provide some concession­s to producers who have to purchase all raw material including maize locally paying comparativ­ely high prices.

The replacemen­t of the price ceiling with a formula based method (2013 and 2014 budget proposals) would not help poultry firms to absorb their costs, another poultry industrial­ist who wished to remain anonymous said, adding that the government should take measures to tackle the cost of production issue rather than introducin­g plaster solutions.

He said that the industrial­ists demand a price increase of Rs. 80 per kg to compensate for the increased cost of production but it went unheeded by the Consumer Affairs Authority.

Dr. Athula Mahagamage, President of the World’s Poultry Associatio­n – Sri Lanka Branch disclosed that the consumptio­n of chicken meat in the country is 11,000 metric tons per month and the demand for chicken has been rising rapidly when compared to other kinds of meat.

Therefore the government should give some kind of assistance to boost the industry, he suggested.

At present an average of 10,000 MT of chicken meat and 100 million eggs are produced monthly. The monthly per capita availabili­ty is 6 kg. The target for 2016 to be self-sufficient in the industry is the production of 18,000 MT of chicken meat and 280 million eggs per month. In order to achieve this target the government should provide facilities along capital investment grants but not pricing formulas, he added.

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