Honduras Traditional Crops
Hanging banana stem on a conveyer belt
Courtesy Dennis W. Calkin
Women with coffee bushes
Courtesy Dennis W. Calkin
Throughout the twentieth century, Honduras's
agriculture has
been dominated first by bananas and then to a lesser
extent by
coffee and sugar. Although their overall importance has
declined
somewhat, bananas and coffee together still accounted for
50
percent of the value of Honduran exports in 1992. The
combined
value of the two crops also continued to make the biggest
contribution to the economy in 1992. Total banana sales
that year
were US$287 million, and total coffee sales amounted to
US$148
million. These figures, which reflect a substantial
decline from
previous years' sales, reflect production losses suffered
by banana
producers and the withholding of coffee exports from the
market in
a futile effort to force improvements in the face of
record
breaking price declines.
Two United States-based, multinational
corporations--Chiquita
Brands International and Dole Food Company--now account
for most
Honduran banana production and exports. Honduras's
traditional
system of independent banana producers, who, as late as
the 1980s,
sold their crops to the international banana companies,
was eroded
in the 1990s. In the absence of policies designed to
protect
independent suppliers, economically strapped cooperatives
began to
sell land to the two large corporations.
Although Honduran banana production is dominated by
multinational giants, such is not the case with coffee,
which is
grown by about 55,000 mostly small producers. Coffee
production in
Honduras has been high despite relatively low yields
because of the
large numbers of producers. Honduras, in fact,
consistently
produced more than its international quota until growers
began to
withhold the crop in the 1980s in an attempt to stimulate
higher
prices. Despite the efforts of the growers, coffee prices
plunged
on the international market from a high of more than
US$2.25 per
kilogram in the mid-1970s to less than US$0.45 per
kilogram in the
early 1990s. As a result of the declining prices, coffee
producers
were becoming increasingly marginalized.
The outlook for the sugar industry, which had boomed
during the
1980s when Honduran producers were allowed to fill
Nicaragua's
sugar quota to the United States, seemed bleak in 1993.
Restoration
of the sugar quota to Nicaraguan growers has been a major
blow to
Honduras's small independent producers, who had added most
of
Nicaragua's quota to their own during the United States
embargo of
Nicaragua. Higher costs for imported fertilizers because
of the
devaluation of the lempira add to the problem. Honduran
producers
seek relief from a relatively low official price of 25
lempiras per
kilogram of sugar by smuggling sugar across the borders to
Nicaragua and El Salvador, where the support prices are
higher.
Sugar growers who can afford it have begun to diversify by
growing
pineapples and rice. Many independent sugar growers, like
independent banana producers, have become indignant over
the
relatively high profits shown by refiners and exporters.
Strikes by
producers at harvest time in 1991 forced the closure of
the
Choluteca refinery for a short time but had little effect
on the
depressed long-term outlook for the industry.
Data as of December 1993
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