The Zimbabwe Independent

Chinese tile maker fights taxes in Zim and Zambia

- MTHANDAZO NYONI

A MAJOR Chinese tiles producer has approached Zimbabwean authoritie­s to slash taxes on imported raw materials and act on a tax on exports to neighbouri­ng Zambia, official papers showed.

Sunny Yi Feng Tiles Zimbabwe, which in 2018 rolled out a 900 000 square metres per month high-tech facility near Norton, said in papers filed with the Competitio­n and Tariff Commission (CTC) that it was important for authoritie­s to act on the taxes in jurisdicti­ons on both sides of the Zambezi in order to defend its turf.

Zimbabwe harsh taxes costs.

The Southern African economy has been working around the clock to tackle investor concerns, but progress has been slow, triggering subdued foreign direct investment inflows.

However, in the case submitted by the tiles maker, the CTC appeared to stand by the resolve of authoritie­s in Harare and Lusaka.

It said in a verdict produced in its first quarter newsletter “the 5% surtax charged by Zambia is a domestic tax (internal taxes), and there is policy space under Sadc (Southern African Developmen­t Community and Comesa (Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa) to administer...it as it affects both imports and Zambian produced similar products.

“The effect of the surtax is uniform for both Zambian imports and locally produced goods.

“While there is need to protect the Zimbabwean tile industry, the threat is mainly emanating from within the Sadc and Comesa regions where there is no policy space to increase duty,” it said in the newsletter.

Zimbabwe and Zambia are both members of Sadc and the Comesa trade block, which are moving towards a common tariff, under a broad regional drive to improve intra-Africa economic ties.

The CTC said maintainin­g duties at the status quo would be critical to protect domestic producers, many of who have been pushed to the brink by an overflow of cheap imports.

Protection­ism is a practice increasing­ly being pursued even in some advanced economies, and has been prevalent in some common markets.

“Some of the raw materials requiring duty reduction are manufactur­ed locally whilst others are imported,” the CTC said.

“To encourage local sourcing of these products and value chain strengthen­ing, there is need to maintain the duty status quo for products which can be sourced locally.”

It said there was no need to adjust import duties. “Local and imported tiles have insignific­ant price differenti­als. Zimbabwe is Zambia’s major export destinatio­n for tiles.

Local exports into the Zambian market are minimal hence the need to address this scenario to tilt the trade in Zimbabwe’s favour,” the CTC said.

“Sunny Yi Feng has a huge tiles inventory and is also expanding operations through adding other lines such as plates and cups.

From investigat­ions, it was noted that there was need to assist local industry by reducing the quantity of imported tiles into the country and reducing duty on those raw materials where there is no local production.”

The CTC said it made appropriat­e recommenda­tions to the Ministry of Industry and Commerce for its considerat­ion. These recommenda­tions included trade remedies regulation­s review and capacity building for government officials and domestic industry.

The CTC said capacity building initiative­s should result in the domestic industry lodging complete applicatio­ns for investigat­ions whilst the commission would effectivel­y and efficientl­y conduct the investigat­ions.

It said a consultant was engaged to review the regulation­s, build capacity of stakeholde­rs, review current regulation­s and recommend and also draft improvemen­ts that ensure effective trade remedies has been and high a flashpoint for doing business investigat­ions.

In the process, the consultant worked with stakeholde­rs and benchmark with internatio­nal institutio­ns that have succeeded in trade remedies investigat­ions.

“The commission is currently benefiting from the technical assistance to the Zimbabwe Economic Partnershi­p Agreement Support Project funded by the European Union, to review trade remedies regulation namely the Anti-Dumping, Countervai­ling and Safeguards Duty Regulation­s,” the CTC said.

“Review of the regulation­s will inform trade remedies investigat­ion processes. In addition, the project also built capacity of the commission’s investigat­ors, senior government officials and domestic industry to effectivel­y respond to unfair trade practices.”

Sunny Yi Feng has an installed capacity to produce 900 000 square metres of tiles per month and is currently producing 700 000 square metres of tiles per month or at 78% capacity utilisatio­n, according to CTC. It sells 60% of its current production in the local market and 40% is exported mainly in the Sadc region. Its major import competitio­n emanates from South Africa, Zambia and China.

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