Sugar tax a challenge for small-scale cane growers

SA Canegrowers are concerned over the added burden of the health promotion levy on the sugar industry.

Ahead of his Mid-term Budget Policy Statement on Wednesday, SA Canegrowers is calling on Finance Minister Enoch Godongwana to provide a signal on the future of the health promotion levy (HPL).

With high input costs already weighing down the agricultural sector, the added burden of the HPL on the sugar industry poses an existential threat to SA’s 21 000 small-scale growers and must be eliminated.

At his budget speech in February, Godongwana announced an increase in the tax, but this was subsequently postponed to April 2023 to allow for further consultation on lowering the four-gram threshold and extending the levy to fruit juices.

While this postponement provided some relief for growers, the prolonged enforcement of the HPL has continued to hamstring the industry, which has also been faced with other cost pressures, including a spike in fertiliser and energy prices along with ongoing bouts of load shedding.

“While SA Canegrowers has written to Minister Godongwana to request a meeting to discuss the HPL, we have received no response to date. We have therefore also written to President Ramaphosa requesting his intervention in this long-running problem to provide desperately needed relief for the industry by eliminating the sugar tax.”

The tax was introduced in 2018 with the objective of reducing obesity levels in the country, so as to reduce the burden of disease on the country’s healthcare system.

Despite being in force for more than four years, there remains no credible evidence that the intervention has reduced obesity levels in the country.

But the economic impact of the tax has been consistently demonstrated by credible research.

Read original story on www.citizen.co.za

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Andrea van Wyk

Caxton’s Digital Editorial Manager. I am a journalist and editor with experience spanning over a decade having worked for major local and national news publications across the country and as a correspondent in the Netherlands. I write about most topics with a special interest in politics, crime, human interest and conservation.
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