Kenyan traders fail to secure maize imports over rising prices

Published 2023년 3월 23일

Tridge summary

High international prices have prevented traders from importing maize at the government-set price of Sh4,200 per 90-kilogramme bag. A ship from Ukraine, carrying maize, docked at the Port of Mombasa but the consignment was yellow maize instead of the required white maize. The government had made it mandatory for traders to import maize at Sh4,200 per bag before issuing import permits, but millers have refused due to the unavailability of non-Genetically Modified maize and a weakening shilling. Currently, maize is selling for Sh6,000 per bag in the international market, the same price as in Kenya, making imports unprofitable.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

Traders have failed to secure maize imports from the overseas market on the back of high international prices that have made it difficult to ship in the produce at the government-restricted price of Sh4,200 for a 90-kilogramme bag. A tonne of maize at the international market has topped $420 (Sh54,978) a tonne, translating to Sh6,000 for a 90-kilo bag when it lands in the country, putting traders at a crossroads over importation given that they had signed an agreement with the government for produce to land in the country at Sh4,200. Read: Duty-free maize imports call attracts 250 traders Last week, a ship from Ukraine carrying maize docked at the Port of Mombasa, however, it was established the consignment was of yellow produce and not white. The Sh6,000 a bag is the same price that the maize is selling at in the country, meaning that the imports, which were to aid in lowering the current high cost of flour, will have no impact. Read: Farmers face losses as disease, armyworm ...

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