Overview of Agribusiness Industry in Argentina in 2019-20Updates on the macroeconomic situation On December 10, 2019, the new President, Alberto Fernández, took office, with 48.24% of the votes, thus triggering a change from the ruling party in the hands of the opposition to the previous government's coalition.
According to INDEC, Argentina's economic activity in 2019 closed with an annual fall of 2.1%, after the recession worsened in recent months during the tenure of the previous government of Mauricio Macri. The decline is one of the worst results witnessed in the last 10 years, although it improved by five tenths compared to that of 2018. The data from December revealed that the Argentinian economy contracted that month by 0.3% compared to the same month in 2018. On a positive note, the index that measures economic activity registered an increase of 0.2% in the 12th month of 2019 compared to November, when the said indicator fell 1.6%. In August 2019, after the primary elections, the Argentinian economy suffered a new setback as a result of the economic crisis that began in April 2018, and ended that year with an inflation of 53%, unemployment of 9.7%, according to INDEC, and a poverty index, which reached 40.8%, according to a study by the Universidad Católica Argentina. Argentina’s Ministry of Economy, led by Martín Guzmán, is in talks with the International Monetary Fund to try to renegotiate the Argentinian debt, among which is a loan of US$ 56,300 million. According to INDEC, in 2019, Argentina exhibited a positive trade balance of US$ 15,990 million as a result of exports of US$ 65,115 million and imports of US$ 49,125 million. The trade surplus is the largest since 2009 when a positive balance of US$ 16,885 million had been achieved. The jump in the dollar, which lowered Argentina’s cost to export, and the recession that slowed imports, contributed to this; in 2019, the value of the dollar climbed from $38.60 to $63 (+ 63.21%) and was later contained by exchange controls, which started in September and deepened toward the end of October. Exports increased 5.4% due to a 12.2% increase in quantities and a 6% decrease in prices. Conversely, imports fell 25% due to a 20.7% decrease in volume and 5.4% in prices. Thus, the exchange rate fell in 2019 by 10.2% to US$ 114,240 million. Argentina thus reversed the trade deficit of US$ 3,701 million that it had in 2018 and that of US$ 8,293 million in 2017. Foreign sales were the highest in five years, since 2014. Purchases, on the other hand, were the lowest since 2009 when there was also a recession due to the international crisis of the previous year. In December 2019, the trade balance registered a surplus of US$ 2,241, being the fourth highest monthly surplus in the last 30 years. Dynamics of agriculture policies The initial measures taken by the new administration included an increase in commodity export taxes called retentions. During the previous administration, they have been paying a fixed tax for each dollar invoiced abroad of $3 for industrial products and $4 for agribusiness exports. The new government made a first modification and then another one, with the current values of: 5% for sunflower (12% previously), wheat flour and oils (12% previously), polished rice (9% previously), packaged flint corn (12% previously), flour and sorghum oils (same as before) and corn pisingallo (9% previously). Wheat grains (12%), sorghum (12%) and corn grains (12%) remained at the same tax level. As for soybean, it is 30% (being 33 % for producers of more than 1000 tons per year, and values that are decreasing from 30% for producers of less than 500 tons per year). Beef is subject to a 9% retention. These taxes negatively impact the supply of the sector, contracting its production and investment in technology. If production falls, less foreign exchange comes in and the economy suffers, the prices of the products rise or internal shortages are generated. In some areas, production ceases to be viable, and the producers move to carry out other crops or activities, such as pasturing for livestock.
At a state level, Córdoba, one of the provinces of Argentina, became the first to come up with a law of good agricultural practices. This is the first national regulation that establishes a way of producing non-refundable incentives to those producers who develop responsible and sustainable agricultural practices using a set of principles, standards and technical recommendations aimed at reducing physical, chemical and biological risks in the production, processing, storage and transportation of products of agricultural origin. Agricultural production and commodity exports The production data of the main crops of the Argentinian agricultural sector were as follows:
Analysis of the agrochemical market trends & changes
The Bayer-Monsanto combination presents, some opportunities in strategic and operational aspects in the market, since they consolidated a series of first-line plant protection products, a dominant position in the corn market, a leadership in biotechnological events and an advantage in the use of big data. During the 1st half of 2019 the consumption of inputs for crop production -agrochemicals and fertilizers- grew almost 30% in comparison with the same period of the previous year. This growth was aligned with the increase in the planted areas of corn and wheat and the use of new technology tools by farmers. Wheat reached a record production and continued its growth for the fourth season. For the plant protection market in 2018, the producer sought to buy herbicides and other inputs closer to the time of use and with financial help, due to the fact that he faced a complicated situation arising from the severe drought that year. In 2019, on the other hand, due to the good season, purchases were more anticipated, and mostly, with the grain exchange modality. Regarding the consumption of fertilizers for crop farming, 2019 was expected to see a growth of 4,686,567 tons in comparison with 2018 when it was 4,305,443 tones. It was represented by an improvement in local production, imports and exports, mostly for sources of Phosphorus and Nitrogen. According to a survey of 944 production establishments throughout the country, only 5% of agricultural producers use organic products or bio pesticides, and even so, the future outlook is promising, as 36% of farmers believe this trend will increase. Of those who used biological products, 85% have a positive evaluation of the product (20% say it is very good and 65% say it is good), while only 15% maintain a negative or regular result. The future trend for the agrochemicals market sees a decreased investment in these inputs, since agricultural technology is one of the most affected items and is used as an adjustment variable when there are increases in commodity export taxes such as those established by the current government, and which will affect the 2020/21 planting campaign. The crops that demand more fertilizers and agrochemicals will see their margins affected with lower profitability, so there will be a change toward crops such as soybean, to the detriment of grasses, mainly corn and wheat. Changes in agrochemical policies and regulations Through Resolution 32/2019, the National Service of Agri-food Health and Quality (Senasa) unified the numerous regulations that determine the prohibited and restricted active principles, as well as the formulations of coadjuvants and rodenticides not authorized in Argentina. The regulation has been framed in the “Good Practices in the Matter of Simplification” that seek to facilitate the user to gain knowledge and understand the regulations established by the National public sector. The ranking of prohibited active substances, according to the pests they control, is led by insecticides with 26 substances. Second are rodenticides, of which eight active ingredients cannot be used in the formulation of chemical controllers. Third, four fungicides have been banned in the country, while within plant controllers, only two herbicides have been banned. The ranking is completed with an active ingredient of acaricides and one of antibiotics. With respect to regulated products, it is determined that there are 14 of them and they are mainly products for use in tobacco. In addition, the regulations state that rodenticides cannot be formulated in liquid forms, soluble or wettable powders, or powdered or paste baits. Meanwhile, there are six unauthorized adjuvants and these are Phenol, Formaldehyde, Dimethylformamide, Metaonl, Rhodamine B and Malachite Green. Latest developments to the Argentine GM market In 2018, Argentina ranked third among the top ten countries that planted GM crops with a total planting area of 23.9 million hectares, including 18 million hectares of GM soybeans, 5.5 million hectares of GM maize and 0.37 million hectares of GM cotton, under an adoption rate approaching 100%.
In October, Argentina approved maize event MON87427 x MON89034 x MIR162 x NK603 (Monsanto), which is the 60th GM crop approved in this country since the first in 1996. To support the domestic cotton industry and shorten its technological gap with Brazil, the Argentinian government is committed to protecting intellectual property rights and introducing more advanced GM cotton technologies. Argentina’s National Seed Institute (INASE) has made considerable efforts to control illegal seeds, including by deterring farmers from using unauthorized traits and controlling cotton seed breeding facilities to cut off illegal seed production lines. This year, Argentina approved three new GM cotton traits. In February, the country approved a type of GM cotton that can resist glyphosate herbicide and HPPD inhibitor herbicide. In June, GlyTol TwinLink Plus GM cotton with herbicide resistant and insect resistant traits was authorized, the second GM cotton with insect resistant traits after BollGard was introduced in 1998 to combat Pectinophora gossypiella, a harmful insect that developed resistance to Bt protein and poses a serious threat to cotton crops. In August, VIPCOT GM cotton resistant to Lepidoptera insects was approved. The first two products were commercialized by BASF, and VIPCOT was developed by Syngenta and is now licensed to BASF. In mid-October, the National Scientific and Technical Research Council (CONICET) started the official registration of the country’s first GM potato, SPT TICAR, aiming to launch a GM potato product next year. This potato virus (PVY) resistant product was jointly developed by CONICET and Sidus, a biotechnology company.
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