El Salvador Major Crops and Commodities
Coffee
Salvadoran coffee cooperative
Courtesy United States Agency for International Development
Coffee has fueled the Salvadoran economy and shaped its
history for more than a century. It was first cultivated for
domestic use early in the nineteenth century. By mid-century its
commercial promise was evident, and the government began to favor
its production through legislation such as tax breaks for
producers, exemption from military service for coffee workers,
and elimination of export duties for new producers. By 1880
coffee had become virtually the sole export crop. Compared with
indigo, previously the dominant export commodity, coffee was a
more demanding crop. Since coffee bushes required several years
to produce a usable harvest, its production required a greater
commitment of capital, labor, and land than did indigo. Coffee
also grew best at a certain altitude, whereas indigo flourished
almost anywhere.
Unlike those of Guatemala and Costa Rica, the Salvadoran
coffee industry developed largely without the benefit of external
technical and financial help. El Salvador nonetheless became one
of the most efficient coffee producers in the world. This was
especially true on the large coffee fincas, where the
yield per hectare increased in proportion to the size of the
finca, a rare occurrence in plantation agriculture. The
effect of coffee production on Salvadoran society has been
immeasurable, not only in terms of land tenure but also because
the coffee industry has served as a catalyst for the development
of infrastructure (roads and railroads) and as a mechanism for
the integration of indigenous communities into the national
economy.
In the decades prior to the civil conflict of the 1980s,
export earnings from coffee allowed growers to expand production,
finance the development of a cotton industry, and establish a
light manufacturing sector. After 1979, however, government
policies, guerrilla attacks, and natural disasters reduced
investment, impeding the coffee industry's growth. To make
matters worse, after a price jump in 1986 world coffee prices
fell by 35 percent in 1987, causing coffee exports to decline in
value from US$539 million to US$347 million.
Government control of coffee marketing and export was
regarded as one of the strongest deterrents to investment in the
industry. In the first year of Incafe's existence, coffee yields
dropped by over 20 percent. During each of the ensuing four
years, yields were about 30 percent lower than those registered
during the 1978-80 period. Although the area in production
remained fairly constant at approximately 180,000 hectares,
production of green coffee declined in absolute terms from
175,000 tons in 1979 to 141,000 tons in 1986; this 19 percent
drop was a direct result of lower yields, which in turn were
attributed to decreased levels of investment. According to the
Salvadoran Coffee Growers Association (Asociacion Cafetalera de
El Salvador--ACES), besides controlling the sale of coffee,
Incafe also charged growers export taxes and service charges
equal to about 50 percent of the sale price and was often late in
paying growers for their coffee.
Coffee growers also suffered from guerrilla attacks,
extortion, and the imposition of so-called "war taxes" during the
1980s
(see Left-Wing Extremism
, ch. 5). These difficulties, in
addition to their direct impact on production, also decreased
investment. Under normal conditions, coffee growers replaced at
least 5 percent of their coffee plants each year because the most
productive coffee plants are between five and fifteen years old.
Many coffee growers in El Salvador, in an effort to avoid further
losses, neglected to replant.
Although most coffee production took place in the western
section of El Salvador, coffee growers who operated in the
eastern region were sometimes compelled to strike a modus vivendi
with the guerrillas. During the 1984-85 harvest, for example, the
guerrillas added to their "war tax" demand a threat to attack any
plantation they thought underpaid workers. They demanded that
workers receive the equivalent of US$4.00 per 100 pounds picked,
a US$1.00 increase over what was then the going rate. The fact
that growers negotiated with the guerrillas--while the government
looked the other way--demonstrated the continuing importance of
coffee export revenue to both the growers and the government.
Data as of November 1988
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