Paraguay
Livestock
Raising and marketing
livestock, a traditional source of livelihood in Paraguay,
remained a major segment of agriculture and the economy at
large during the 1980s. Livestock output accounted for
roughly 30 percent of agricultural production and about 20
percent of the sector's exports. The raising of livestock
represented more than a quarter of total land use and 80
percent of all capital investment in agriculture. Paraguay's
vigorous livestock sector also was responsible for the
country's high per capita production and consumption of meat
and dairy goods. It was estimated that 40 percent of the
country's land was especially suited for livestock and some
20 percent generally suitable. Endowed with plentiful
grazing lands, Paraguay had vast potential for livestock
development.
After the importation of
7 cows and a bull by the Spanish in the mid-1550s, the
country's cattle herds swelled to some 3 million head by the
time of the War of Triple Alliance, the largest herds in the
Southern Cone. As with every other sector of the Paraguayan
economy, the war devastated the country's livestock sector,
leaving only 15,000 head. It was not until World War I that
domestic demand was met locally and significant exports left
the country. By the end of World War II, beef exports had
become a major foreign exchange earner. Beef production and
exports fluctuated considerably in the postwar period
because of international price movements, weather
conditions, government pricing policies, and other factors.
In 1987 the country's cattle herd stood at about 8 million
head with an annual slaughter rate of 1 million head. In
that same year, 75 percent of the slaughter went to the
domestic market and the remaining 25 percent to the export
market.
Cattle, mostly beef
cattle, were found throughout the countryside. The Chaco
region was best known for its contribution to cattle raising
because of its lack of crops and its sprawling ranches.
Nevertheless, the cattle population density of Eastern
Paraguay, 0.6 head per hectare, was actually higher than
that of the Chaco region, 0.3 head per hectare.
The country's breeding
stock was primarily Spanish criollo, although over the years
considerable crossbreeding with English breeds and zebu
cattle from Brazil had taken place. Although cattle were
numerous in Paraguay, the country lacked a sufficient number
of pure-bred breeding cattle. The livestock sector also
suffered from a low calving percentage, a high mortality
rate, and a long fattening period for steers. Artificial
insemination was increasingly common. To a certain extent,
cattle raising reflected the disparities in agriculture in
general. There were numerous farmers who owned only a few
head of relatively unproductive cattle that were slaughtered
for the local market under relatively poor sanitary
conditions. By contrast, extremely large cattle ranches
typically were owned by expatriates and butchered more
productive animals for both national and international
markets.
Seventy slaughterhouses
for the domestic market and eight for the export market
operated in the 1980s. Local slaughterhouses often could not
pass sanitary inspections, but government inspection efforts
were focused on improving quality control of exports to meet
the stringent regulations of foreign beef markets. The
country's beef exports expanded until 1974, when Paraguay
lost access to European Economic Community (EEC) markets and
lower world prices further stagnated output. Beef exports
responded strongly but erratically in the 1980s as the
government's minimum export price system and contraband
activity undercut greater export efforts. For example, beef
exports were a mere 3,100 tons in 1985, 48,000 tons in 1986,
and 18,000 tons in 1987, the last being the more typical
figure. The 1986 boom in beef exports was the direct result
of beef shortages in Brazil caused by price controls under
its "Cruzado Plan." Paraguay's principal export
markets were Brazil, Peru, Chile, the EEC (specialty items
only), Colombia, Uruguay, and Saudi Arabia. Missing from
official 1987 data, however, was the unregistered sale of an
estimated 300,000 head of cattle along the Brazilian border.
Official government
policy favored strong cattle development and exports, a view
articulated in national livestock programs since the early
1960s. A major policy tool to promote livestock growth was
the FG. The FG was not only the major lender to the
industry, but it also provided certain veterinary equipment
and medicine, encouraged quality control in meat and dairy
products, and operated a model farm in the Chaco.
Dairy cattle represented
only a small fraction of the total herd. Most milk
production occurred at an estimated 400 dairy farms in
Asunción, Puerto Presidente Stroessner, Encarnación, and
Filadelfia. The best yields came from holstein-friesian
dairy cattle followed by crossbreeds and criollo. High feed
costs and the general inefficiency of small dairy farmers
slowed the growth of the industry. The country produced
approximately 180 million liters of milk a year in the late
1980s.
Other livestock activity
including poultry farming and the swine industry. Some of
the most productive poultry farming took place in the
Mennonite colonies, in Japanese colonies in the eastern
border region, and in the greater Asunción area. Observers
estimated that there were over 14 million chickens, 400,000
ducks, 55,000 turkeys, and several other types of fowl. Egg
production stood at 600 million per year in the late 1980s
and was growing at about 4 percent a year. Pig farming was a
relatively minor activity, engaged in mostly by small
farmers. The pork industry's greatest structural problems
were the high cost of feed and consumer preferences for
beef. Government policy emphasized self-sufficiency in feed
grown on small pig farms. Paraguay's swine population
amounted to roughly 1.3 million in the late 1980s and had
grown at a rate of 6 percent a year in the first half of the
decade.
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