Colombia Livestock
A rancher and his daughter in Caquetá Department
Courtesy United States Agency for International Development
The Colombian cattle industry expanded in the late
1980s from
producing meat and dairy products to supporting a growing
leather
business. There were more than 150,000 cattle ranches,
two-thirds
of which were under 250 hectares in size. They were
located in the
Caribbean coast departments of Bolívar, Córdoba,
Magdalena, and
Atlántico, as well as in the eastern plains departments of
Boyacá
and Meta and the intendancy of Arauca.
In the 1980s, Colombia ranked fourth among Latin
American
countries in cattle raising, with an average annual herd
size of 20
to 24 million cattle. This placed Colombia behind Brazil,
Argentina, and Mexico, which had herds of 95 million, 54
million,
and 33 million, respectively. Herd size had been
relatively stable
since 1970.
Fifteen percent of the cattle were raised for dairy
purposes
and the remainder for meat. Beef production stagnated and
then
declined slightly through the 1980s. Total beef output
fell from
627,000 tons in 1983 to 620,000 tons in 1985 because of
declining
prices and lower profit margins. Milk output reached
nearly 3
million liters in 1985.
In contrast to beef production, the leather industry
grew
rapidly in the late 1980s. Leather output rose by 26
percent in
1986; more than 300 enterprises, each employing at least
ten
workers, consumed nearly 1,400 tons of cattle hides valued
at
US$9.2 million. In 1986 the total value of finished
goods--luggage,
footwear, and other accessories--reached US$87.2 million.
Poultry and sheep constituted the largest share of
Colombia's
livestock business. Poultry was the fastest growing
nonbeef sector.
The total number of chickens grew from 68 million in 1980
to 85
million in 1985, largely because of modernization
completed in the
late 1970s. From 1976 until 1985, sheep herds grew from
approximately 2 million to 2.7 million; the wool produced
was
considered of inferior quality, however, and generally was
not used
in the textile industry, except for local consumption.
Data as of December 1988
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