Ethiopia: Ministry of Trade implements stringent registration process for Khat exporters

Addis Abeba – The Ministry of Trade has announced that khat exporters will now be required to undergo a rigorous registration process, which includes meeting newly issued pre-license requirements to participate in the business. The objective of this move is to streamline operations and enhance earnings from khat exports.

The new directive applies to all existing exporters who have renewed their operations in the current fiscal year, as well as those wishing to enter the khat export industry. The re-registration period for exporters is scheduled to take place from 7–25 November, 2023.

During a press briefing held yesterday, Gebremeskel Chala, Minister of Trade and Regional Integration, emphasized the necessity of pre-licensing criteria for the khat export sector. According to him, this criteria aims to identify challenges faced by the industry and implement operational reforms to improve the export revenue derived from this stimulant.

Previously, khat used to rank among Ethiopia’s top five commodities in terms of export earnings. However, the yearly revenue generated from this cash crop has significantly declined from over $400 million a decade ago to $248 million last year.

Gebremeskel also stressed that pre-license requirements are crucial to ensuring fair benefits for farmers engaged in the trading business, preventing illegal traders from infiltrating the system, and encouraging the participation of legal traders.

There are almost 5,000 registered khat exporters in Ethiopia; however, less than 500 are active in the industry.

Gebremeskel warned that khat exporters who fail to renew their licenses within the given timeframe and meet the necessary requirements will have their khat export license revoked.

Khat trading and export have faced recent challenges, particularly after the ministry’s announcement of doubling the export price for the cash crop in April 2022. This decision required exporters to deposit $10 for every kilo of exported khat into an Ethiopian bank. Although the decision was briefly reversed following a ban from the Somaliland Khat Association, it was later reinstated, leading to significant disruptions in the khat market and creating an unsustainable burden for exporters and the farming community.

In May 2022, the Ministry made an additional announcement stating that it had taken action to revoke the business licenses of 830 khat exporters. These exporters were believed to be engaged in unlawful activities such as failing to renew their licenses and misusing their services.

The government’s intervention in khat trading extends beyond the federal level. In July 2023, Addis Standard reported that farmers and exporters of khat in the Oromia region have been grappling with an unforeseen socio-economic crisis due to excessive taxation at multiple checkpoints on both municipal and regional levels. These interventions have had negative consequences for all parties involved, including the farmers and exporters.

According to the Ethiopian Statistical Service, over 3.8 million farmers in Ethiopia are involved in khat cultivation, with annual harvests exceeding 2.4 million quintals.

 
Looks like the Khat trade is finally being regulated in Ethiopia. Rip to the Somali traders that will be fully replaced by the Oromo traders that want to seize the market for themselves. They're trying to monopolise the Khat trade.
 

repo

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That's good for Ethiopia. Oromo farmers, Oromo packagers, Oromo trucks and untaxed on the Somaliland side. This is great vertical integration and then some.
 
Looks like the Khat trade is finally being regulated in Ethiopia. Rip to the Somali traders that will be fully replaced by the Oromo traders that want to seize the market for themselves. They're trying to monopolise the Khat trade.

You're right. Monopolizations seems to be the agenda of the federal government. This will only lead to a concentration of licenses to associates/partners they have ties with.

At first I thought that it was odd that they referred to the khat industry in Ethiopia as unregulated, because previously it was left to each regional state to make their khat policies, that I assumed was in accordance with the fed gov't.

Then I stumbled upon the article below, and apparently all reg'l taxes on khat were considered as 'illegal checkpoints', which they blamed on the recent decrease of export. So they ordered the removal of all of them in order to compete with the untaxed Kenyan khat who are sold at a lower price in Somalia.

Officials at Ethiopia Customs Commission have ordered regional authorities to dismantle illegal checkpoints that have been collecting taxes on khat exports.

Addis Ababa’s order for regional officials to dismantle illegal checkpoints collecting “khat taxes” targets a constraint that has strangled khat exports to Somalia for the past four months.

In a circular signed last month, Revenue Commissioner Debele Kabeta instructed all regional administrations and city governments that it is “strictly prohibited” to impose taxes on exportable goods — in this case, khat shipments bound for Somalia and other border economies.

Ethiopia’s khat shipments to its northern neighbor ground to a halt for over four months after regional governments with major khat farming imposed their own tariffs on traders, authorities say. The taxes have choked off the flow of khat — a leaf chewed as a mild stimulant — into Somalia and other border markets.

The illegal checkpoint taxes have cost Ethiopia’s khat growers and exporters dearly, hitting family farm incomes and revenues hard.

The country lost USD 20 million due to the four-month export halt to Mogadishu, Somalia, according to the Ministry of Trade and Regional Integration.

Khat generates USD 392 million annually for Ethiopia, making it the fourth largest export after coffee, gold and flower.

There are 4,991 licensed khat exporters in Ethiopia. Of these, 499 are authorized to export to Somalia, a market directly impacted by the trade halt.

Regional authorities are blamed for illegally taxing khat exports, forcing federal customs officials to order regions in a letter to dismantle illegal tax checkpoints and cease what they called an unlawful practice.

Regions including Harari, Oromia and Somali have begun imposing taxes on khat being exported to neighboring nations since October last year. While consumers in Somaliland and Djibouti were little impacted initially, the rule now applies to all khat exports.

“This is against the law that exportable products are not taxed and has made Ethiopian khat exporters uncompetitive in the market,” said Kassahun Gofe, State Minister of Trade and Regional Integration.

The new tax coincided with Kenya granting khat traders permits to export to Somalia as the two countries rebuild ties following the election of Hassan Sheikh Mohamud as Somalia’s new president.

Kenya has been offering khat at a lower price, making it more competitive as Ethiopia’s lucrative khat trade, earning hundreds of millions annually, is threatened by taxes enacted by the regional states.

“Kenyan exporters have a comparative advantage as they are not taxed,” Kassahun added. Previously, Ethiopia was the only supplier to Somalia but Kenya’s return to the market has shifted dynamics, he said.

However, since Ethiopia also exports khat to Hargeisa and Djibouti in addition to Mogadishu, Somalia, foreign exchange from khat is not said to have completely dried up, according to Kassahun.

Discussions are being held with large khat-growing regions like Oromia, Somali, Harari and Dire Dawa, including the Customs Commission, so overlapping taxes imposed in each region can be lifted, Kassahun said.

Not only khat exporters but also farmers growing the crop have faced huge losses due to the new tax rules which halted exports to Somalia.

Farmers have been forced to sell their harvest into the domestic market at suppressed prices. The illegal checkpoint levies have inflicted losses not just on exporters but also on khat farmers.

Yadata Junedi’s Khat Export Company is one of the exporters hit hard by the tax rule introduced by the regions. The company previously shipped 20,000 to 40,000 kg of khat per day to Mogadishu. However, it hasn’t exported anything for the past four months, according to its owner.

“As a result, the firm has lost out on up to USD 500 in daily revenue,” the owner, Fahmi Abdulmajid, said.

“When we export khat, checkpoints everywhere collect taxes. It’s a chaotic situation. We increased the price of exported khat to compensate for the duty. But Mogadishu does not buy high-priced products,” Fahmi added.

The Ministry of Trade acknowledged the problem.

“It’s true and we are discussing with regions to solve the issue,” said Kassahun.

Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed (PhD) echoed Kassahun’s view during questions from parliamentarians who had raised the issue of why regions are taxing khat exports.
https://www.thereporterethiopia.com/35360/
 
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The Somali region issued a directive recently to the finance offices of all districts, to stop taxing khat.

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I'm not up to date with the history of khat taxes, but the article (in my previous post) mentions how taxes only started recently, the beginning of this year.

However, based on directives from previous administration of the Somali region, they seem to have been in place for quite a long time now.

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@GaradShabeel

So the federal government is essentially overturning the short lived taxes imposed on khat by the regional states to stop the loss of missing revenue by cutting out the corrupt middlemen, keep up competition with Kenya, and also have their own (Oromos) control it.

Wuxu Caqli badana. That's a Triple W. :mjhaps:
 
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So the Federal government is essentially overturning the short lived taxes imposed on khat by the regional states to stop the loss of missing revenue by cutting out the corrupt middlemen, keep up competition with Kenya, and also have their own (Oromos) control it.

Wuxu Caqli bandana. That's a Triple W. :mjhaps:

Someone in the Somali region need to use their ties with the Somali finance minister so he can give us some preferential treatment. He has the ultimate say after all :denzelnigga:
 
Looks like the Khat trade is finally being regulated in Ethiopia. Rip to the Somali traders that will be fully replaced by the Oromo traders that want to seize the market for themselves. They're trying to monopolise the Khat trade.
khat grows in oromo land so really they should.
 
They still gotta go thru the Somali region to reach its markets, so it’s only fair we get a slice of that pie. Don’t you think Galan?
 
contorrol stations are everywhere near the oromo border. they go to oromia buy the khat go Djibouti and sell it making double profit.
 

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