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Sugar producers seek help against corn syrup imports

A group of sugar producers has asked for Government intervention as the industry struggles to compete with corn syrup imports.
Hanoi (VNA) - A group of sugar producers has askedfor Government intervention as the industry struggles to compete with cornsyrup imports.

The Vietnam Sugarcane and Sugar Association (VSSA) asked theGovernment to intervene in adjusting tax incentive policies on importedHigh-Fructose Corn Syrup (HFCS), or liquid sugar extracted from corn, to createa fair playing ground with locally-produced sugarcane products.

The association also asked the Ministry of Industry and Tradeto consider investigating the possibility of applying special safeguard methodson HFCS.

The recommendations were released as sugarcane businessesface challenges in the level of consumption of local sugar products as well aspressure from competition posed by increasing imports of HFCS products into thecountry, which they say cause serious damage to the domestic sugar industry.

According to a report from the Vietnam General Department ofCustoms, the volume of imported HFCS dramatically accelerated between 2015 and2017, with imports in 2017 totalling 89,343 tonnes, up 31.7 percent from 2015.

These were mainly imports from China and the Republic of Korea,representing more than 90 percent of total output and import value.

HFCS is much cheaper than local sugar, and prices areexpected to decline further due to improvements in production technology. In2015, the price of white sugar was 630 USD per tonne compared to 496 USD pertonne of HFCS. In 2017, it was 702 USD and 398 USD per tonne of sugar and HFCS,respectively.

The difference between the average selling price of HFCS andsugar has remained high through recent years, increasing by 21.26 percent in2015, 36.63 percent in 2016 and 43.3 percent in 2017.

VSSA Chairman Pham Quoc Doanh said given this difference inprices, HFCS poses a major challenge to the domestic sugarcane industry.

Doanh said HFCS enjoyed a preferential import tax rate ofzero percent and no quota impositions, while preferential tariffs on sugarunder quota stood at 5 percent, and tariffs on non-quota white sugar and rawsugar were 85 percent and 80 percent, respectively.

In addition to damaging sugar production in the country, hesaid the inconsistent application of tax policies between sugar and HFCSproducts has caused damage to the State budget.

“If HFCS is seen as similar to sugar made from sugarcane, theimport tax rate should be similar, not discriminatory,” Doanh said. “The levelof incentive import duty imposed on HFCS must be at the level applied onsugar.”-VNA
VNA

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