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Ukraine Sunflower Sector: 2004 Update. Presentation by David Jackson LMC International Kiev, Ukraine March 2005. Outline of the Presentation. Current sector situation Government intervention in sector Export Tax and VAT issues Conclusions. Current Situation - Field. Area is increasing
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Ukraine Sunflower Sector: 2004 Update Presentation by David Jackson LMC International Kiev, Ukraine March 2005
Outline of the Presentation • Current sector situation • Government intervention in sector • Export Tax and VAT issues • Conclusions
Current Situation - Field • Area is increasing • Yield is decreasing • Overall, production is increasing
Harvested Area, Yield and Production for Sunflower Seed, 1990/91-2004/05
Reasons for Low Yields • Shorter rotations • Declining inputs • Lack of finance • Low technological input • Land tenure uncertainties
Potential Solutions Key: • Finance • Technology
Constraints On Credit • Land as collateral • Crop guarantees • Legal enforcement • Farm resources
Current Situation - Factory • Rapid build up of capacity • Rapid build up of crushing • Export tax of 2001 increased crushing domestically
1,200 Imposition 17% Export duty of 23% on seeds 1,000 export duty 800 600 400 200 0 1992/93 1994/95 1996/97 1998/99 2000/01 2002/03 2004/05 Diagram EXEC.2: Sunflower Seed Exports, 1992/93-2004/05 '000 tonnes
7,000 6,000 5,000 '000 tonnes 4,000 3,000 2,000 2001/02 2003/04 2005/06 2007/08 2009/10 Indicative Capacity Sunflower Seed Production Diagram EXEC.3: Crushing Capacity versus Sunflower Seed Production, 2001/02-2010/11
Crushing Capacity Surplus Capacity = • Closure of capacity • Increase domestic seed production • Import seed 4 mn tonnes seed = 14*1,000 tpd
Government Intervention • Border protection • Reduce agricultural tax burden • Agriculture VAT exemptions • Export taxes
Export Tax Impact • Lowered domestic seed price • Increased seed availability • Raised capacity utilisation • Increased oil exports • Encouraged domestic crushing
Export Tax Impact • Does it lower seed price? Extent depends on: • Seed surplus (2003/04) – 21% below export parity • Seed deficit (2001/02) – 3% below export parity
350 23% Export 17% Export Duty Duty 300 250 US$ per tonne 200 150 100 Jan-98 Jan-99 Jan-00 Jan-01 Jan-02 Jan-03 Jan-04 Actual Price Tax-Free Export Parity Price Sunflower Seed Prices in Ukraine (including VAT) Compared with Tax-Free Export Parity Price
VAT Refund Impact • 300,000 tonnes of seed = VAT US$12 million When not refunded on exports: • Export margins low or negative • Adds to business risk • Costs of accessing reimbursement
Crushing Margins for Domestic Market and Exporters of Oil and Meal, with and without VAT Reimbursements
VAT Refund Impact • Export margins low • Domestic margins healthy • Overall margins reasonable if VAT refunded • But - margins boosted by export tax and global market
Average Crushing Margins with and without VAT Reimbursements Versus Indicative Tax-Free Export Parity Crushing Margin
Conclusions Cautious reform to address: • VAT • Export tax • Direct support to farmers • Access to credit
Recommendations: VAT • Reduce seed VAT to zero • Remove farm VAT exemption (but irrelevant at zero VAT on seed)
Recommendations: Export Tax • Remain at 17% while VAT reformed, then, if successful • 10% in two years • 5% in five years
Recommendations: Direct Support Limited funding from: • Fixed agricultural tax reform • Subsidised interest reform • VAT exemptions reform
Recommendations: Access to Credit • Land ownership • Legally enforced warehouse receipts • Subsidised interest reform • VAT exemptions reform