- By Admin
- 11 Feb, 2021
Ethiopia Exempted Tax on Imports of Agricultural Mechanization, Irrigation and Animal Feed Technologies
Ethiopia’s
Ministry of Finance (MoF) has approved the tax reform policy that looks to
exempt agricultural mechanization, irrigation and animal feed technologies and
equipment from import duties.
The tax reform policy was
initiated by the Ethiopian Agricultural Transformation Agency (ATA) in close
collaboration with the Ministry of Agriculture (MoA), reports Addis Standard. The
ministry of agriculture and ATA conducted a cost-benefit analysis and
identified and listed the equipment to be imported tax-free aimed at improving
food security in the country.
“Based
on the study recommendation by ATA, the Agricultural Transformation Council
provided direction to facilitate farmers’ access to agricultural technologies
which will ensure food security at the household level and national nutrition
development,” ATA said.
The duty and taxes where
exempted on imports of farming machinery, irrigation and drainage equipment as
well as animal feed ingredients and technologies to escalate the agriculture
sector is the aim of the tax reform. The development also seeks to provide
incentives to investments to enhance the importation and local production of
these technologies.
A
transformation from small-scale subsistence farms to mechanized, more
commercially viable farms has been identified as a major contributor to food
security in the country. Without mechanized agriculture, productivity suffers
drastically, notes the Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa, an
organization funded by the Bill & Melinda Gates and Rockefeller Foundations
that seeks to boost agricultural transformation and improve food security in
Africa.
According
to the African Development Bank (AfDB), Africa currently spends about US$35
billion annually on food imports with the bank projecting that if the current
trend continues, food imports could rise to $110 billion by 2050.
There are Technologies to
achieve Africa’s green revolution but they are mostly just sitting on the
shelves. The provocation is a lack of encouragement policies to ensure that
they are scaled up to reach millions of farmers,” says AfDB president Akinwumi
Adesina.
In
2018, the Malabo Montpellier Panel (MMP), a group of African and international
experts, listed 12 African countries as having demonstrated strong growth in
mechanized agriculture and consequently achieved higher output.
This included Ethiopia,
Malawi, Mali, Morocco, Rwanda, Tanzania and Zambia.
The report recommends using
public-private partnerships to develop local machinery industries to ensure
affordable and appropriate technology is in use.