New Chinese wine import tariff on Australia to hit mostly small wineries

Jose Salman
Published 2020년 12월 1일
Wineries in some of Australia's premier wine regions are looking down the barrel of a difficult future with China's wine tariffs likely to put smaller wineries out of business and force larger growers into new markets.

After years of developing strong relationship with Chinese importers, a tariff with such high percentage (107% up to 200%) will affect all wineries selling to China, but especially those who have a big share destined to the Asian country.

Wines which normally sell for $25 a bottle will immediately see their price rise up to $75, for the same bottle.

Meanwhile competitor countries — France, Chile, and New Zealand — will not have to pay this tax, seeing as a most likely effect, even on most loyal Australian consumers, switching to a new wine country.

Australia's wine export industry to China is worth AUD $1.2 billion (USD $0.9 billion) annually. Probably, this number won't repeat if the temporary tariff stays during 2021.
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