China's sugar industry
seeks sweet success on import curbs
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[May 19, 2017]
By Hallie Gu and Josephine Mason
BEIJING
(Reuters) - China's beleaguered sugar producers are hoping for a taste
of victory next week as Beijing prepares to deliver its verdict on sugar
import duties and intensifies a crackdown on rampant smuggling along
ancient trade routes.
On Monday, China's Commerce Ministry will issue its first ruling on a
months-long investigation into raw and refined sugar imports, having
already proposed hefty tariffs in a draft ruling.
A steep hike in duties by the world's biggest sugar importer would be a
serious blow for top producers Thailand and Brazil, amid concerns about
waning global demand for the sweetener.
However, it would offer a much-needed reprieve to millions of small
farmers and state-owned producers like Nanning Sugar Industry and Cofco
Tunhe Co who argue cheap imports have caused billions of dollars of
losses, cost jobs and forced output cuts.
"If results are what the market has rumored, imported sugar will lose
its competitiveness while domestic sugar will get a boost," said Wang
Weidong, analyst based in Nanning, Guangxi province, at Huatai Futures.
In a further sign that Beijing is trying to revive the broader industry,
it has tightened checks along China's porous southern border with
Myanmar to try to stamp out the flow of illicit sugar, a source at a
major global trader, a sales manager at a top southern producer and
three experts said.
As much as 2 million tonnes of raw and refined sugar from Thailand and
other producers - worth some $2 billion at current prices - is stowed on
trucks and ships and sold illegally at wholesale markets each year,
traders estimate.
Sugar is one of the few sectors in which China struggles to compete with
foreign rivals because smallholder farmers have to employ more labor,
driving up costs.
China's most-active white sugar futures were at 6,737 yuan ($977.60) per
tonne on Friday, nearly double the price of London futures.
The country currently imports about 3 million tonnes of sugar a year,
with 1.94 million tonnes of sugar imports allowed at a tariff of 15
percent as part of China's commitments to the World Trade Organization.
Beijing also allows out-of-quota imports, which have been set at about
1.9 million tonnes in the past two years, and currently attract a 50
percent duty.
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A migrant worker carries sugarcanes stalks at a market in Shanghai
March 10, 2009. REUTERS/Aly Song
SMUGGLED SWEETENER
Smuggling will be discussed at a meeting next week called by the China Sugar
Association with producers and refiners, in the top sugar growing province
Guangxi, a source briefed on the matter said.
The association did not respond to calls seeking comment, while customs did not
respond to a fax seeking comment on the tighter border controls.
Some in the industry worry that higher tariffs could tighten domestic supplies
and boost prices locally, making China an even more alluring market for
smugglers.
"Many
major criminals are still at large ... Smuggling is still blatant, and hasn't
been smashed completely yet," the China Sugar Association's official journal
said recently.
Still, this year's crackdown, which started a few months ago and intensified in
late March, has had some success, stemming shipments through Yunnan province,
leading to the arrest of some traders and boosting domestic prices, according to
traders and experts.
Prices of smuggled sugar have risen in China's wholesale markets, they said,
while wholesale sugar prices in Myanmar, a major conduit for smugglers, have
fallen.
In a recent trip to check the availability of illegal product in Henan province
in late April, the sales manager said he no longer saw any smuggled sugar
disguised as product from his company.
"The crackdown happens every year and usually the smuggling got quieter for a
couple of weeks following each crackdown. But this year, it has been quiet for a
couple months," said the source at a major global trader.
(Reporting by Hallie Gu and Josephine Mason; Editing by Richard Pullin)
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