18 Agricultural Products Included in "Early Harvest" List Will Practically Help Them Export to China
As negotiations for the “early harvest” under the economic cooperation framework agreement (ECFA) concluded on June 24, the Council of Agriculture (COA) said the government has fulfilled its commitment not to open the Taiwan market to more items of Chinese agricultural products because the opening of Taiwan market and lowering of import tariffs are not on the negotiation agenda. Besides,
According to the 2009 statistics, exports of the 18
In order to protect the interests of Taiwan farmers, agricultural officials had insisted on maintaining the current import ban on 830 items of Chinese agricultural products and the import tariff rates on the 1,415 items of mainland products that are allowed to enter the Taiwan market before ECFA negotiations so that the agreement will not adversely affect the domestic agriculture, noted the COA. The Council repeatedly emphasized that agriculture was not involved in ECFA negotiations and the agricultural department of both sides had not sent officials to participate in the negotiations. And
In response to the expectations of domestic farmers and fishermen, the COA made a list of 27 agricultural product items which have potential for export to the
1) Farm produce (covering 13 taxable items): Oncidium and other orchid cut flowers, golden needle mushroom, banana, orange, lemon, Hami melon, pitaya (fire dragon fruit) and tea.
2) Fish products (covering 5 taxable items): other live fishes including grouper, other refrigerated fresh fishes (including mullet, grouper and marlin), other frozen fishes (including Pacific saury and thread fin), other frozen fish fillets (including milkfish, albacore, big-eye tuna and yellow-fin tuna), other unlisted animal products (including soft-shelled turtle eggs).
The average import tariff rates for the above-mentioned 18 taxable items is 13.3% and
As to the other 9 items including such animal products as processed pork, egg and duck pieces that are not given preferential treatment,