Colombia Crops
Harvesting carrots in Boyacá Department
Courtesy Inter-American Development Bank
Colombia produced a variety of crops for both export
and
domestic consumption; in the late 1980s, many had yields
above
regional and international levels because of the
technological
advances in production. Improvements in fertilizer, seeds,
and
machinery were particularly effective in enhancing yields
for
export crops such as coffee, rice, sugarcane, and potatoes
(see
table 8, Appendix).
Many domestically consumed crops did not perform as
well as
export crops, however, largely because they were produced
on small
plots using traditional farming techniques and were
cultivated
without the benefit of modern agricultural inputs.
Colombia lacked
the market incentives to provide these improved inputs for
many
consumable crops, a situation that contributed to lower
output and
a higher agricultural import bill.
Coffee remained Colombia's primary export crop
throughout the
1980s. The entire industry, including processing and
transporting,
accounted for about 8 percent of GDP, contributed 12
percent of
government revenues, and generated approximately 50
percent of
foreign exchange. Coffee provided a livelihood for more
than
300,000 farmers, and over 2 million jobs were linked to
some stage
of coffee production.
Despite stagnating or slightly declining output during
the mid1980s , Colombia ranked second in world production of
coffee,
surpassed only by Brazil (see
table 9, Appendix). Known
for the
mild arabica coffee grown in the temperate central
highlands, the
Colombian coffee crop often commanded above-average prices
in the
market place. Because coffee is a tree crop grown on
rough, steep
terrain, harvesting remained a labor-intensive process,
and most
coffee farms were still small, occupying an average of
fewer than
six hectares of land.
Bananas were second to coffee in economic importance.
Concentrated on the southern Caribbean coast around the
Golfo de
Urabá, production took place on both large plantations for
export
and small plots for domestic consumption. Banana
production grew at
relatively high rates in the early 1970s, only to slow
later
because of the reduced competitiveness of Colombian banana
prices.
Production again rose in the mid-1980s as domestic prices
moved
toward lower international levels.
Cut flowers, including carnations, chrysanthemums,
dahlias, and
roses, became a significant export crop in the late 1970s
and in
1986 earned US$155 million in revenue. Singled out as the
definitive example of Colombia's diversification strategy,
the
Colombian flower industry became the second largest in the
world,
surpassed only by that of the Netherlands. The principal
markets
were the United States, which purchased more than 80
percent of
Colombia's flowers, and Western Europe.
In 1987 there were more than 250 farms dedicated to
producing
cut flowers; the average size was about eight hectares.
Because
producing cut flowers was a labor-intensive process and
amenable to
the temperate mountain valley areas surrounding Bogotá and
Medellín, the cut flower industry operated year round,
providing
jobs to more than 70,000 workers. Related industries, such
as air
transport and packaging, also benefited from the
development of cut
flower exports.
Other important export crops included sugarcane and
cotton.
Sugarcane was grown on large estates in valleys and other
lowerlying areas, principally in southwestern Colombia's
department of
Cauca. Production remained relatively steady throughout
the 1980s,
taking advantage of the area's temperate climate and even
pattern
of rainfall. The sugarcane industry was regarded as well
managed
and produced yields well above regional and world
standards.
Cotton production developed, among other reasons, to
provide
the textile industry with raw materials. Both large and
small
cotton farms were found along the economically expanding
Caribbean
coast. After a substantial drop in the early 1980s,
production
surged again in the late 1980s because of increased land
cultivation and improved yields. An additional 65,000
hectares of
cotton--representing a two-thirds increase in total land
cultivation--were sown in 1987 in anticipation of higher
international prices.
Food production for domestic consumption represented
the other
major agricultural endeavor and included staple crops such
as rice,
beans, cassava, potatoes, barley, corn, and wheat.
Although
Colombia had long sought self-sufficiency in food
production,
certain cereals, particularly corn and barley, were
produced
inefficiently and were not competitive with imports.
Despite
government intervention to improve the yields of these
crops,
planners doubted that production inefficiencies could be
eliminated
by the early 1990s.
Corn, a staple of the Colombian diet and the most
widely grown
subsistence crop in the 1980s, flourished on steep slopes
as well
as on level ground. Although wheat and barley were also
adaptable
to highland areas, production costs often exceeded market
prices,
causing output to vary greatly from year to year. Other
foods grown
for consumption included tubers (such as potatoes and
cassava) and
beans, which were often planted together in subsistence or
smallfarm operations. Dietary requirements also were met with
numerous
types of indigenous fruits.
A discussion of the agricultural sector would be
incomplete
without mention of illegal crop production. In the late
1980s,
cannabis flourished in Colombia's fertile northeastern
mountain
areas, and coca was grown in the more secluded portions of
the
Amazon Basin. The production of marijuana and cocaine from
these
plants had long been associated with the Colombian
economy.
The United States Department of State estimated that
approximately 13,000 hectares of land were devoted to
cannabis
production in 1986, an increase of 62 percent over the
previous
year. The average yield per hectare was 1.1 tons, or
potentially
14,100 tons nationwide. Despite government attempts to
eradicate
marijuana cultivation, growers continued to produce it in
vast
quantities, moving into areas not traditionally associated
with
cannabis production, such as Antioquia in central Colombia
and
areas near the Panamanian border.
Like Bolivia and Peru, Colombia was a major cultivator
of coca.
Total land area devoted to coca production increased 60
percent
from 1983 to 1986, reaching 25,000 hectares. Cultivation
occurred
largely in secluded areas and employed small quantities of
land,
usually less than two hectares per parcel, which made
detection
difficult. Each hectare could produce an estimated 1.6
kilograms of
cocaine base. Total annual production in 1986 was
estimated at
twenty-seven tons.
Colombia's reputation as a global drug center rested
primarily
on its capacity to process coca into cocaine and
distribute it
worldwide, rather than on production of the coca leaf
itself. In
the 1980s, Colombia processed and shipped an estimated 75
percent
of all South American cocaine destined for the United
States, most
of which was transported by ship and airplane from
Colombia to
Florida.
Data as of December 1988
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