Haiti Crops
Cash Crops
Workers at a cotton gin, Gonaïves
Courtesy Inter-American Development Bank
Squeezing sugarcane, Petit Goâve
Courtesy Inter-American Foundation
Despite its relative decline, coffee endured as the
leading
agricultural export during the 1980s. The French had
introduced
coffee to Haiti from Martinique in 1726, and soon coffee
became
an important colonial commodity. Coffee production peaked
in
1790, and it declined steadily after independence.
Production
dropped precipitously during the 1960s. After a boom in
prices
and in the production of coffee in the late 1970s, output
declined again from 42,900 tons in 1980 to 30,088 tons by
1987.
Coffee trees covered an estimated 133,000 hectares in the
1980s,
with an average annual yield of 35,900 tons. Haiti was a
member
of the International Coffee Organization (ICO), but found
itself
increasingly unable to fulfill its ICO export quota, which
stood
at 300,000 bags, of 60 kilograms each, in 1988. Most
analysts
believed that excessive taxation and the low prices
afforded to
peasant farmers had contributed to the decline in coffee
production.
Coffee provides one of the best examples of the market
orientation of Haiti's peasant economy. Most peasants grew
coffee, usually alongside other crops. More than 1 million
Haitians participated in the coffee industry as growers,
marketers (known as Madame Sarahs), middlemen
(spéculateurs), or exporters. The peasants'
widespread
participation throughout the coffee industry demonstrated
that
they were not merely subsistence farmers, but that they
were also
actively engaged in the market economy. After harvest by
peasants, female Madame Sarahs transported coffee to local
and
urban markets and sold the beans. Middlemen, in turn, sold
coffee
to members of the Coffee Exporters Association
(Association des
Exportateurs de Café--Asdec), which set prices and thereby
passed
on the traditionally high coffee-export taxes directly to
producers. Because of its prominent role in agriculture
and the
inequitable nature of the trade, the coffee industry was
the
subject of numerous studies. The majority of these studies
highlighted imperfect competition and the systematic
enrichment
of a small group of Port-au-Prince exporters.
Sugar was another cash crop with a long history in
Haiti.
Columbus brought sugarcane to present-day Haiti on his
second
voyage to Hispaniola, and sugar rapidly became the
colony's most
important cash crop. After 1804, production never returned
to
preindependence levels, but sugar production and low-level
exports continued. Unlike the system in other Caribbean
countries, sugar in Haiti was a cash crop raised by
peasants
rather than by large-scale plantations. The sugar harvest
dipped
to under 4 million tons by the early 1970s, but it
rebounded to
nearly 6 million tons of cane by the middle of the decade
with a
sharp increase in the world price of the commodity. Lower
world
prices and structural problems combined to cause a drop in
sugar
output in the 1980s; by the end of the decade, sugarcane
covered
fewer than 114,000 hectares of the coastal plains, and it
yielded
fewer than 4.5 million tons annually.
Further expansion of the sugar industry faced serious
deeprooted obstacles. For example, the production cost of
Haitian
sugar was three times more than the world price in the
1980s.
Shifts in the world sugar market, caused mainly by the
international substitution of corn-based fructose for
sugarcane,
exerted further pressure on Haitian producers. One result
of this
situation was the practice of importing sugar, which was
then reexported to the United States under the Haitian sugar
quota.
Reductions in Haiti's quota during the 1980s, however,
limited
exchanges of this sort.
Total sugar exports dropped from 19,200 tons in 1980 to
6,500
tons in 1987. In 1981, 1982, and 1988 Haiti exported no
sugar.
Haiti's four sugar mills closed temporarily on several
occasions
during the decade
(see Manufacturing
, this ch.). The
oldest mill,
the Haitian American Sugar Company (HASCO), was the only
plant
that maintained a large cane plantation. Realizing the dim
future
for sugar, outside development agencies proposed
alternatives to
sugar, such as soybeans, for Haiti's plains.
Cacao, sisal, essential oils, and cotton were other
significant cash crops. Cacao trees covered an estimated
10,400
hectares in 1987, and they yielded 4,000 tons of cocoa a
year.
Mennonite missionaries played a growing role in the cocoa
industry, mostly around southern departments, especially
Grande'Anse
(see
fig. 10). Sisal, exported as a twine
since 1927,
peaked in the 1950s, as the Korean War demanded much of
the
nation's 40,000-ton output. By the 1980s, however, Haiti
exported
an average of only 6,500 tons a year, mainly to the
Dominican
Republic and Puerto Rico. The substitution of synthetic
fibers
for sisal reduced most large-scale growing of the plant,
but many
peasants continued to harvest the natural fiber for its
use in
hats, shoes, carpets, and handbags. The export of
essential oils,
derived from vetiver, lime, amyris, and bitter orange,
peaked in
1976 at 395 tons. Exports leveled off at a little more
than 200
tons during the 1980s, generating an average of US$5
million in
foreign exchange. Cotton cultivation peaked in the 1930s,
before
Mexican boll weevil beetles ravaged the crop. Growers
introduced
a higher quality of cotton, in the 1960s, which was
processed in
local cotton gins and then exported to Europe. Cotton
prices fell
in the 1980s, however, and cotton plantings shrank from
12,400
hectares in 1979 to under 8,000 hectares by 1986. Exports
ceased.
Government policies in the 1980s emphasized
diversification into
nontraditional export crops that would benefit under the
terms of
the CBI; the poor performance of traditional cash crops
enhanced
the importance of these efforts for the Haitian economy.
Data as of December 1989
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