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Big Brands Warn of Sugar Crisis

By Katherine Glover | Aug 13, 2009

Kraft Foods, General Mills, Hershey and Mars are worried about our sugar supply. So worried, in fact, they helped write a letter to Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack warning that the U.S. could “virtually run out of sugar” if our tariff system is not adjusted.

For all of our boasting about free trade, this country is extremely protectionist when it comes to sugar — only a limited amount of sugar is allowed into the country before a high tariff kicks in. This policy has kept the price of sugar artificially high.

Right now sugar prices are at record levels unseen since the early 1980s. Bad weather in India has slowed output, and demand is up because so much sugar is going into ethanol production, particularly in Brazil.

The coalition of companies behind the letter said they want to be able to import more sugar without paying the high tariffs. According to the Wall Street Journal, “the companies threatened to jack up consumer prices and lay off workers if the Agriculture Department doesn’t allow them to.”

Sugar growers, naturally, are opposed to lower tariffs, which they say would hurt their profits. Jack Roney, an economist for the American Sugar Alliance, said that if sugar prices drop, the food companies will reap the benefits without passing any of the savings onto the consumer.

Furthermore, he said, there is no shortage of sugar in the U.S. The companies’ letter was written before the USDA reported improvement in the country’s stocks-to-use ratio.

Companies reliant on high-fructose corn syrup, such as PepsiCo and the Coca-Cola Company, are staying out of the debate. But as consumer demand leads more companies to turn to sugar as an HFCS alternative, I wonder if that will change, with a growing number of companies pitting themselves against the powerful sugar lobby.

Katherine Glover is a Minneapolis-based print, radio and online journalist. She's written for Salon.com, Sierra Magazine and many others, and she does a weekly blog on immigration issues for MinnPost.

BNET User Analysis

Web Buzz:
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    Reuters - 99 days 21 hours 50 minutes ago

    (Reuters) - Large U.S. food companies said the country could "virtually run out of sugar" unless the Obama administration eased import curbs, the Wall Street Journal said. In a letter to Agriculture Secretary Thomas Vilsack, the companies -- including Kraft Foods Inc (KFT), General Mills Inc (GIS), Hershey Co (HSY) and Mars Inc -- said there...

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    Biofuels & Climate Change - 98 days 9 hours 12 minutes ago

    The Wall Street Journal’s Scott Kilman reported earlier this week on a letter sent by General Mills, the Grocery Manufacturers Association and Kraft Foods to Ag. Sec. Tom Vilsack, asking for reduction of trade tariffs on sugar. From Kilman’s article and the letter, it’s clear that grocery manufacturers are once again trying to distract...

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    WASHINGTON  The Sugar Policy Alliance here is urging Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack to increase sugar import quotas for the current fiscal year and the upcoming year to avoid shortages. In a letter signed by ConAgra Foods, General Mills, Kraft Foods, Nestl USA, Unilever U.S. and others, the alliance points to the U.S. Department of...

 
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  •  
    1

    JP_999

    08/13/09 | Report as spam

    Get Rid of Sugar Tariffs

    Getting rid of the sugar tariffs would help the U.S. consumer, and also help the environment.

  •  
    2

    steven-t

    08/24/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Big Brands Warn of Sugar Crisis

    Tariffs are good. They give our country money that would
    otherwise come from the taxpayers. Free-trade shouldn't
    mean no tariffs - it should mean even-handed and equal
    tariffs. Why should we give incentive to companies that do
    any kind of business outside of the US? If they need
    something that American farmers or workers can't provide, let
    pay tariffs. Let them make up for not providing jobs for
    americans, with relieving the American taxpayer. Why should
    we not charge other countries to sell products in ours? That
    would be like a shopping mall not charging rent to its retailers.
    Actually, it would be like the best mall in town not charging
    rent to its retailers.

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