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						South African farmers play chicken with Trump tariffs
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		 [August 29, 2018] 
		 By Joe Bavier 
 HARTBEESFONTEIN, South Africa (Reuters) - 
		Herman Pretorius is just the kind of white South African farmer U.S. 
		President Donald Trump expressed concern for when he barged into the 
		country's delicate land reform debate by ordering an investigation into 
		the "large-scale killing of farmers".
 
 But for the greying, bespectacled 58-year-old, wading knee-deep through 
		some 35,000 chickens at his isolated homestead in South Africa's North 
		West province, it's the United States and its cheap poultry exports that 
		are a threat.
 
 "We cannot compare our chickens with theirs. The price difference will 
		kill us," said Pretorius, speaking with a gravelly voice in his native 
		Afrikaans.
 
 For years, the two countries have fought over poultry: Washington has 
		kept South African poultry out on health and sanitation grounds while 
		Pretoria accuses U.S. farmers of dumping chicken at below-cost prices 
		and has imposed tariffs.
 
 But in 2015, South Africa's powerful poultry industry agreed to exclude 
		65,000 tonnes of U.S. chicken from the anti-dumping tariff - in return 
		for the renewal of broader duty-free U.S. trade access that benefited 
		other South African industries.
 
		
		 
		Now, as a consequence of his "America First" trade strategy, Trump's 
		decision to impose tariffs on steel and aluminum has reignited the 
		poultry clash, threatening nearly $2 billion of South African exports to 
		the United States under Washington's flagship African trade legislation 
		(AGOA).
 South African poultry farmers say because U.S. aluminum tariffs apply to 
		South Africa - even though aluminum should be exempt under the AGOA 
		agreement - the 2015 chicken deal is void and it's time to slap tariffs 
		on U.S. poultry again.
 
 After months of threats, the South African Poultry Association (SAPA) 
		pulled the trigger last week and filed a lawsuit against its government, 
		calling for the U.S. poultry tariff exclusion quota to be suspended.
 
 In its quest to rebalance trade relationships, Trump's administration is 
		giving no quarter as it targets friend and foe alike, from the European 
		Union to China. Coming on the heels of a row with Rwanda, the dispute 
		with South Africa highlights how even the smallest trading partners are 
		not being spared.
 
 "We're not the cause of anybody's problems, and yet we've been 
		affected," South African Trade Minister Rob Davies told Reuters in July. 
		"We've become collateral damage in a trade war that is not of our 
		making."
 
 DUMPING DISPUTE
 
 When Pretorius set up his first chicken coops 27 years ago, he said 
		competition from foreign imports wasn't an issue.
 
 Now, he runs 14 industrial chicken houses that turn out more than half a 
		million birds every few weeks. But in recent years he said his business 
		has stagnated - and he blames cheap poultry imports for driving down 
		prices.
 
 "The damage got to a point where I wanted to expand my business ... 
		wanted to create jobs for our people. But the imports from overseas hurt 
		me badly," Pretorius said. "I want the South African government to 
		increase the import tariffs."
 
		
		 
		In the 20 years from 1995 to 2015, South Africa's annual poultry 
		consumption nearly tripled to more than 2 million tonnes. But local 
		production has expanded at a slower rate than imports, which account for 
		a quarter of consumption.
 To protect local farmers, the poultry industry lobbied for protectionist 
		measures and in 2000 the government imposed an anti-dumping tariff on 
		U.S. "bone-in" poultry. The duty is currently fixed at 9.40 rand ($0.64) 
		per kg.
 
 "That just levels the playing field for our own producers versus their 
		dumped product," said SAPA's Marthinus Stander.
 
 South Africa argues that the U.S. industry is tailored to Americans' 
		preference for white, de-boned breast meat. Since U.S. producers can 
		recover their costs with the sale of breast meat, SAPA says the thighs 
		and drumsticks favored by South Africans can be exported at below cost.
 
 U.S. producers say the South African tariff is illegal.
 
 "The anti-dumping duties imposed on U.S. poultry were based on a flawed 
		legal theory ... that has twice been held by WTO (World Trade 
		Organization) panels to be inconsistent with international rules," said 
		James Sumner, president of the USA Poultry & Egg Export Council (USAPEEC).
 
 In 2015, U.S. authorities approached the South Africa and, using the 
		threat of a withdrawal of South Africa's AGOA benefits, pushed for a 
		quota exempt from the tariff.
 
		
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			Chickens are seen at a poultry farm at Hartbeesfontein, a settlement 
			near Klerksdorp, in the North West province, South Africa, August 
			15, 2018. REUTERS/Siphiwe Sibeko/File Photo 
            
			 
AGOA (African Growth and Opportunity Act) grants qualifying countries duty-free 
access to U.S. markets for thousands of goods and South Africa is among the main 
beneficiaries.
 South Africa's poultry industry agreed to the deal despite the fact its exports 
remain blocked from entering the U.S. market. It calculates the quota has cost 
about 6,500 jobs.
 
"It was for the good of the other industries. So we kind of put on a Team South 
Africa hat in terms of making the rest of the AGOA benefits possible," said 
Stander, who is CEO of Country Bird Holdings Ltd - one of South Africa's top 
poultry producers.
 Last year, according to South African tax authority data compiled by SAPA, the 
United States exported more than 87,000 tonnes of poultry to South Africa, up 
more than 200 percent from 2016 and second only to Brazil's 337,476 tonnes.
 
 WASHINGTON'S WRATH
 
 Trade Minister Davies said when the White House announced tariffs of 25 percent 
on steel and 10 percent on aluminum this year claiming imports threatened its 
national security, Pretoria sought an exclusion.
 
South Africa's steel and aluminum exports to the United States last year were 
worth more than $650 million, according to South Africa's Trade Law Centre.
 But since they constituted just 1 percent of U.S. steel and a little over 1 
percent of its aluminum, they represented no threat to the United States, South 
Africa argued.
 
 "We were just told that we were out. We were not going to be considered for 
exemption. The tariff was going to apply to us," Davies said.
 
 Now that SAPA has filed a lawsuit to force a suspension of the poultry quota, 
the South African government finds itself in an awkward position. If the 
anti-dumping tariff is reapplied, South Africa risks retaliation from Washington 
which could have a more far-reaching impact on the economy as a whole.
 
 
The USAPEEC's Sumner told Reuters his group would lobby the U.S. government to 
take action if the quota is revoked over the metal tariffs.
 "It has absolutely nothing to do with poultry trade between the U.S. and South 
Africa," Sumner said. "SAPA is trying to be opportunistic here and to increase 
trade frictions unnecessarily."
 
 South African meat importers also oppose any suspension of the quota. They say 
it would push up prices for consumers and could provoke Washington's wrath.
 
 "It's quite possible the Trump administration would take South Africa on," said 
David Wolpert, CEO of the Association of Meat Importers and Exporters of South 
Africa.
 
 The form of any possible U.S. retaliation is unclear for now.
 
 "We cannot speculate on what South Africa may or may not do with respect to its 
tariffs and non-tariff barriers," a U.S. State Department official wrote in 
response to Reuters' queries.
 
 But analysts and South African officials worry the country's AGOA benefits may 
be in danger, again.
 
 Washington used the threat of a withdrawal of AGOA benefits to press Kenya, 
Uganda, and Tanzania to roll back tariffs last year on second-hand clothing from 
the United States. Rwanda refused and its AGOA benefits were curtailed in July.
 
 A blanket suspension of South Africa's AGOA status would hit the transportation 
equipment industry hardest. About 85 percent of its nearly $1.4 billion in 
exports to the United States were covered by AGOA last year.
 
 Ultimately, with legal action pending, the South African government's hands may 
be tied. And despite the broader economic implications, South Africa's poultry 
industry is standing firm.
 
 "We agreed something to benefit the South African industries. And that benefit 
has been taken away ... We just want what's fair," SAPA's Stander said.
 
 ($1 = 14.6363 rand)
 
 (Reporting by Joe Bavier; editing by David Clarke)
 
				 
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