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This presentation discusses the challenges and opportunities facing the meat import and export industry in South Africa. Topics include market size, job implications, duty structures, market access, brining concerns, and food security.
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AMIE Presentation Portfolio Committee on Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries Cape Town 13 March 2015
AMIE introduction and presentation on challenges facing the industry • Introductions • David Wolpert CEO AMIE (ceo@amiesa.co.za) • Georg Southey (sub com) (georg@merlog.co.za) • Context • Fallacy • Challenges • Opportunities
The Constitution of AMIE gives the Main Objects as: • To promote and to protect the interests of the Members. • To deal with all matters that may affect the common interest of the Members. • To confer and collaborate with all bodies controlling and administering the Meat Industry in Southern Africa. • To convey views and recommendations to all concerned in order to improve the meat import and export business. • To seek and maximise official recognition of the Association. • To promote and safeguard the common interest of Members in their activities as Meat importers and exporters. • To represent Members in their dealings with the South African Government, SARS, ITAC, Veterinary Services, NAMC and other regulatory bodies. • To disseminate amongst it’s Members information on all matters affecting the Meat Industry. • To correspond and liaise with any similar Associations in other countries. • To promote, support or oppose any legislation affecting the rights or objects of the Association and its Members. • To promote ethical business practice amongst all Association members and in the meat industry.
Imports in Context: • Market Size • Import participation • Jobs • Domestic advantage • Current Duty Structures • SPS • Why Import • Affordable alternatives • Consumer choice • Supplement local production • Balancing supply and demand • Food security
Market Size • Market Size • + 2 billion kg pa • +R 35 billion pa • Imports less than 10% by volume and value • Bone in Imports 2013: 144 million kg <7% of consumption • Water sold as Chicken +500 million litres pa • Big 5 >70% of Market • > 70% sold as IQF (individually quick frozen) (brined 30%+)
Domestic Production Vs Imports 2006-2013 Annex 2(expressed in kg)
Jobs in the import sector • Local Jobs direct 5,000 • Indirect (making consumer ready) 10,000 • Domestic product leaves highly mechanised factories in Retail Ready packs. • Imported product arrives in bulk and has to be converted into Retail Ready form. (the two do not compete) These are real jobs which do exist
Domestic Advantage: • Export Costs • Freight • Clearing Costs • Duty • Domestic “retail ready” • Imports SPS requirements
Duty Structure: Five tariff Headings Current • 0207 12 20 CCS 31% • 0207 12 90 W/Birds 82% • 0207 14 10 B/less 12% • 0207 14 20 Offal 30% • 0207 14 B/in 37% • EU Free TDCA
SPS: • All Import containers subject to export inspection and certification • All import containers subject to inspection at Port of Entry • All import containers subject to Laboratory testing • Bacteria and pathogens • Import requirements amongst most stringent in the world
Fallacy • Cheap Imports: • Customs declared values: are ex works prices • Add Freight and shipping costs • Add Clearing and import costs • Add Cold Storage costs • Add Importers overhead costs • Add Storage Costs • Add Transport and Sales Costs • Add Importer Margin • Add Conversion costs to make retail ready
Current Scenario: • Chicken Leg ¼ land in store at R 21.00 excl Vat • Conversion and Packing • Add Vat and Margin • Selling Price R 30.00/kg to R38.00/kg • IQF 2 kg land in store at R 19.50 excl Vat • Selling Price R 25.00/kg • The Consumer is making a choice to buy the imported product
Challenges: • Food “Insecurity” • Market Access • Brining • Currency • Tariff Protection
Food Insecurity: • 48% by low income households spent on basic foodstuffs of which chicken (animal protein) is the largest portion • Chicken inflation way higher than 4.4% inflation and above 6% SARB target • Current Chicken inflation above 8.5% !! • Source NAMC February2015 Food Review • Our Consumer should not be forced to pay more than necessary for basic foodstuffs
Market Access: • Exports • SADC • 3rd Countries • No National Certification standard • SA Disease Status (Newcastle, AI) • Brining (most import countries do not want/allow brine) • No National Strategy
Market Access • Imports • High Sanitary requirements • Time to Process new market applications • Capacity • Priorities • Deemed Protectionist Policies • Re-opening of closed Markets
Brining: • Mainly Performed by large producers • Barrier to Entry for New Entrants • Lack of access to technology and capital • Moral Theft • Increased Sodium levels (health concerns) • Not Cheap Chicken but Expensive Water • AMIE Supports Brining LIMITS of original proposed 4%
Tariff Protection: • Current Tariff Structure supports current flawed business model • Model needs to change to persuade Global Competitiveness
Currency as protection • The Rand has • Depreciated • 34% against U$ • And 27% • Against Euro • Over past 2 years • Natural import protection • (Source XE.com) ‘Jan 15
What has changed since 2012? • Feed cost reduction R 7 bn Rand pa • SAPA Return to great profitability • More stable labour relations • Currency Depreciation 27% - 33% • Avian Influenza
Opportunities: • Exports • SADC • Niche markets • Extract Best Value per cut • Wasted Costs • Nested Duties (savings of R 750 m p.a -SOYA) Create a CIDP (Chicken Industry Development Plan) with all role players
Water sold as chicken every year twice the volume of imports!! Annex 3 • Imported Volume compared to Brining (2012) • Extracted from Farmers Weekly
Local Chicken Industry Productivity disadvantage(due to flawed business model) Annex 4
Addicted to Protection Annex 5 • History of protection 1997-current • 1997 B/In R 2.20 (2 years) (BTT BR4078) • 2001 USA Dumping • 2004 Duty Increase • 2006 USA Dumping Sunset Review • 2006-13 Brining (hugely profitable) • 2011 USA Dumping Sunset review • 2012 Brazil Dumping application • 2013 Duty review (non EU) • 2014 Avian Flu • 2015 DD EU (Holland, UK, Germany)