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Showing posts from June, 2009

Agricultural insurance supports rural loans

Agricultural insurance and construction of infrastructure are two building blocks of China's rural financial system. So said Liu Shiyu, the vice-chairman of the Peoples Bank of China at a conference on the results of rural finance surveys held at Qinghua University on June 13. According to Liu, village mutual lending organizations generally have only about 300,000 yuan in capital, which means about 1,000 yuan per farmer in loans to support purchases of fertilizer and pesticides. Without agricultural insurance, loans can go unpaid in the event of a natural disaster. The reporter learned from company representatives that the Shaanxi Branch of Peoples Insurance Company and Anhui's Guoyuan Agriculural Insurance Company are among the companies exploring agricultural insurance business. Some products are already offered. The example given in the article is "facilities agriculture." Agriculture's water, electric, gas and road infrastructure need improvement. Subsidized a...

VAT rebates for exports: so much for Chinese demand

On June 1, the value added tax (VAT) rebate was raised for exports of 2600 labor-intensive, high-tech, and "deep processed" commodities. Included were corn starch and ethanol products, for which the rebate was raised from 0 to 5%, and apple juice and canned food, which now get a 15% rebate, up from 13%. Yogurt and butter get a full 17% rebate to support the limping post-melamine dairy industry. The Guangzhou Daily pointed out that this was the seventh round of VAT rebate increases since August 2008. A representative from the Guangdong Province trade bureau said this round of VAT increases was mostly in light industry and food processing, as the central government hopes these will create jobs and improve peoples' livelihoods. It is rumored in industry circles in Guangdong that the VAT rebate will be raised to its maximum of 17%. This is a reminder that the Chinese economy's main objective is to keep people producing things even if it means dumping the products on the f...

Return of the cooperative: grain reserve purchases

"Cooperatives" generally leave a bad taste in the mouths of Chinese farmers. The communes they were forced to join in the 1950s were called "cooperatives" although there was more coercion than cooperation. Farmers could not independently form their own cooperatives or associations until a new law was enacted in 2007. Now Chinese officials have resurrected the cooperative and are pushing them as the new mode for organizing small farmers in China. Each province has a web site listing cooperatives in the province and products they sell. Cooperatives get support from the government, and there is a supermarket-farmer linkage program in which supermarkets purchase (mostly vegetables and fruits) from farmer cooperatives or distribution centers. According to a June 4 article , warehouses in Shaanxi Province that purchase grain for central government reserves have been instructed to place orders with specialized farmer cooperatives in grain-producing areas. A notice issued b...

Green shoots for China's cotton stockpile?

Chinese authorities have stockpiled huge amounts of nearly every commodity this year, mostly in an effort to prevent prices from falling. Now that farmers have sold most of their harvest from last fall, they're looking for the right time to unload their stash. In 2008, China's textile and apparel exports fell off a cliff. The weak demand translated to weak demand for cotton. China's State Council issued a document calling for policies to stabilize farmers' incomes and preventing downward pressure on farm prices that included buying cotton for reserves at a support price. The April cotton market report from the National Development and Reform Commission presents an optimistic picture after months of dismal news. According to customs statistics, April textile and apparel exports were $12.49 billion, down 12.6% from last year, but up 2.7% from the previous month. The report says exports have been warming up since March. Textile exports for the 2008 cotton year could be $1...