Sunday, March 31, 2024

Uganda farmers pay price of duty-free sugar policy

sugar

Workers wait to offload sacks of imported Kakira Sugar from Uganda aboard MV-Satnam after it docked at Kisumu, Kenya. PHOTO | FILE | NMG

By KABONA ESIARA

The duty-free sugar import window that some East African Community (EAC) member states enjoy to plug local sugar deficit is blamed for the sharp drop in prices in Uganda.

At the beginning of the 2023/24 financial year, the EAC Secretariat gave Rwanda, Tanzania and Kenya the greenlight to import tax-free sugar to plug their domestic deficits. But the measure has sharply eaten into Uganda’s regional sugar export market.

Combined, the market size for Uganda’s sugar in Kenya and Tanzania is estimated at 110,000 tonnes annually, with Kenya consuming the lion’s share of 90,000 tonnes.

Farmers are now feeling the heat after cane prices also dropped due to low demand at factories as a result of competition from imported sugar that has flooded the market.

Read: Kenya and Uganda feel pinch of new EAC tax regime

In the face of the shrinking regional sugar market, Bank of Uganda statistics show that millers have suffered a significant loss of the export market share.

According to the central bank, the volume of sugar exports dropped from 229,723 tonnes in the year ending December 31, 2022, to 99,283 tonnes in 2023. The industrial earnings also fell to their lowest — from 163.75 million to 75.79 million — during the same period.

The three main export markets are Kenya, Tanzania and Burundi, and millers say the shrinking Kenya market for Uganda’s sugar is a big blow to the industry.

“Kenya is Uganda’s biggest regional sugar export market, but the country currently has shifted its preference to imported duty-free sugar,” Jimmy Kabeho, chairman of Uganda Sugar Manufacturers Association said.

Mr Kabeho said when the duty-free sugar lands in Kenya, large chunck of it is smuggled through porous border points near Malaba, Busia, and Lwakhakha into Uganda.

“This distorts the market, as the price of the dumped sugar is lower,” he said.

Total output in 2022 reached 600,000 metric tonnes, with Kakira Sugar Ltd, the country’s top producer, accounting for half the production.

Read: Kenya exports to Uganda drop as rest of EAC soar

The millers say domestic market sales have also been affected by the smuggled sugar, resulting in a build-up in stock.

This has forced them to cut production in the short term. The millers, who used to pay Ush230,000 ($59.2) for a tonne of sugarcane in February this year, are now buying it at Ush160,000 ($41.2).

Cane farmers say they cannot break even in the face of high costs of production. To break even, they need to be paid $43.7 per tonne.
Commissioner of Customs at the Uganda Revenue Authority (URA) Abel Kagumire said sugar millers have not shared the smuggling information with tax enforcers for action.

“For the past three months, URA has not intercepted any consignment of smuggled sugar through Malaba and Busia borders,” he said.

But information from the URA indicates that in February, 254 cartons of wheat flour, 19 bags of sugar, 148 boxes of soap, 24 boxes of Colgate herbal toothpaste, and four boxes of Bic pens smuggled from Kenya were intercepted.

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