South Korea: Decrease in tariffs on bait saury, giving Jeju’s cutlassfish industry a breather

Published Jan 15, 2024

Tridge summary

The Jeju cutlassfish industry has been struggling to find bait saury, leading to difficulties in fishing, but a recent easing of tariffs on bait saury may help regain its vitality. The industry has mainly relied on imported saury, facing high tariffs and declining resources, and has been pushing for a reduction in tariffs for over 10 years. The Ministry of Oceans and Fisheries has signed a business agreement for win-win cooperation between the cutlassfish and saury industries, aiming to benefit both sides and prevent illegal bait distribution.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

Attention is being paid to whether the Jeju cutlassfish industry, which had been experiencing difficulties in fishing, will be able to regain its vitality as the burden of tariffs on bait saury is eased. According to the Jeju Special Self-Governing Province and the Ministry of Oceans and Fisheries on the 15th, the cutlassfish industry in the province has mainly used imported saury because there is no bait to replace saury when fishing. The cutlassfish industry pays an adjusted tariff of 24% in accordance with the 1998 ‘Tariff Act’ to bring in imported saury as bait. Since then, as import prices have increased and resources have decreased, it has become increasingly difficult to supply bait, and the cutlassfish industry has been proposing to the government for over 10 years to reduce the adjusted tariff imposed on imported saury to ease management burden. However, the domestic deep-sea saury industry continued to maintain a negative stance on the cutlassfish industry's demands for ...
Source: JejuIlbo

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