Articles in this document:
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China to levy anti-dumping duties on US chicken
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China Poultry Duty Could Hurt US Chicken, Meat
Prices
China to levy anti-dumping duties on US chicken
Reuters
Fri Feb 5, 2010 4:20am EST
* China
to assess duties of 43.1-105.4 pct on chicken parts
* Rising trade and currency tensions
* US
chicken industry's profitable China
business threatened
By Lucy Hornby and Niu Shuping
BEIJING, Feb 5 (Reuters) - China will levy heavy
anti-dumping duties on U.S. chicken products, its Commerce Ministry said on
Friday, a move likely to aggravate trade relations and antagonise
one of the few U.S. industries that profitably exports to China.
The ministry's initial investigation showed that U.S.
companies had dumped chicken products into the Chinese market, according to the
ministry's website (www.mofcom.gov.cn).
The preliminary tariffs were announced a day after China requested a World Trade Organisation ruling on European Union
duties on shoes made in China.
That was the most recent of many cases demonstrating China's embrace of the WTO to keep
markets open to the exports on which it depends.
The United States
and China are engaged in a
series of trade disputes, particularly over the value of the Chinese currency,
with President Barack Obama this week vowing to get tough in dealing with
complaints that U.S.
exports are at a disadvantage.
"The world needs strong U.S.-China economic engagement
now, not a ratcheting up of trade tensions," said Michael Barbalas, president of the American Chamber of Commerce in China.
Chicken wings and feet, virtually worthless in the U.S. market, are a delicacy in southern China. Many U.S. poultry
producers count on the Chinese market to round out their profits.
"Chicken feet and wings are not wanted in the U.S. so they sell them to China, they
dump them below cost," said Wang Xiulin,
president of the Chinese Poultry Association.
"For over a decade, the U.S. has sent big volumes of
chicken to the Chinese market, hurting producers here. Last year, the Chinese
poultry industry was really hurting so we asked for this investigation."
Tyson Foods (TSN.N), an active investor and lobbyist in China, got the
lowest duty of 43.1 percent. Pilgrim's Pride Corp. (PPC.N) was hit with an 80.5
percent duty. Most other firms, including Sanderson Farms (SAFM.O), face a 64.5
percent duty.
Those that did not appeal the finding would pay duties of
105.4 percent, the ministry said.
Duties go into force on Feb 13, or Chinese New Year's Eve,
ensuring the price of the popular delicacies remain steady for holiday shoppers
already fretting about vegetable inflation. The rates could be adjusted in the
final ruling, in several months.
GAME OF CHICKEN
The U.S.
poultry industry had been lobbying for Congress to revoke a prohibition on U.S. inspectors certifying Chinese cooked
poultry plants, a prohibition that China is fighting at the WTO.
That prohibition is lifted in the latest Congressional
budget, although U.S.
inspectors have yet to tour Chinese plants. The author of the prohibition had
cited food safety concerns if cooked chicken were imported from China, which
has undergone a series of food safety scandals, including the delibrate lacing of milk with melamine, a chemical product
that causes kidney stones.
China began its investigation in U.S. chicken parts after
the U.S. imposed safeguard duties on Chinese-made tyres,
which China is fighting at the WTO [ID:nLDE60I1H8].
The new tariffs could close a lucrative market for the U.S. poultry industry, which supplie
more than ¾ of China's
imports.
Chicken feet and wings fetch about 2 U.S. cents per pound in
the U.S., but land in China at about
42 U.S. cents - a figure that Chinese rivals say represents the cost of the
freight only.
A flat import tax of 500 yuan
($73) a tonne and a 13 percent value-added tax mean U.S. wings and
feet can enter the Chinese market at about 54 cents a pound - compared to the
Chinese wholesale price of about 76 cents.
Additional duties mean that U.S. imported chicken parts will
cost about 5 cents per pound more than their Chinese competitors. (Writing by
Lucy Hornby; Editing by Ron Popeski)
reuters.com
China Poultry Duty Could Hurt US Chicken, Meat
Prices
Agriculture Online
Monday February 8, 08:49 am
KANSAS CITY (Dow Jones)--China's decision to impose duties
on imports of U.S. poultry, announced early Friday, could weigh on domestic
chicken prices in the U.S. and possibly put some pressure on other proteins. In
recent years, China has
become a large buyer of U.S.
poultry, mainly the lower priced chicken cuts such as
leg-quarters, "paws" or feet, and wing tips. But the Chinese
government said the imports are hurting the nation's poultry industry and
imposed import duties to be effective Feb. 13. The amount of the duties will
vary from 43.1% to as high as 105.4%, depending upon the supplier.
agriculture.com