Monitoring the impact of COVID-19 in Myanmar: Yangon peri-urban poultry farmers - Late June 2020 survey round

With increasing demand for chicken, the reopening rate of broiler farms in June has overtaken closures. Their challenges have switched from the demand side to the supply side due to a shortage of day-old-chicks. However, more layer farms closed in June than previously. The share of layer farms that...

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Main Authors: Fang, Peixun, Belton, Ben, Ei Win, Hnin, Zhang, Xiaobo
Format: Brief
Language:Inglés
Burmese
Published: International Food Policy Research Institute 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/143821
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author Fang, Peixun
Belton, Ben
Ei Win, Hnin
Zhang, Xiaobo
author_browse Belton, Ben
Ei Win, Hnin
Fang, Peixun
Zhang, Xiaobo
author_facet Fang, Peixun
Belton, Ben
Ei Win, Hnin
Zhang, Xiaobo
author_sort Fang, Peixun
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description With increasing demand for chicken, the reopening rate of broiler farms in June has overtaken closures. Their challenges have switched from the demand side to the supply side due to a shortage of day-old-chicks. However, more layer farms closed in June than previously. The share of layer farms that are operational decreased from 90 to 85 percent with further decreases expected. Cash flow remains the main driver of poultry farms closures. Even though most operational farms did not have problems selling their products due to increasing demand, cash flow remains a problem for them. In the second half of June, cash flow slightly improved for boiler farms, while it slightly worsened for layer farms. The price of broilers peaked at 5,350 MMK/viss in early June due to a supply shortage. Since then, the price has fallen to around 4,000 MMK/viss with recent increases in supply. Supply shortages of day-old broiler chicks was the main problem that prevented broiler farms from fully recovering their operational capacity. Some broiler farms expect their total revenue to increase, while others expect a decrease. In the past two weeks, the number of hired regular workers in operational poultry farms has further decreased by approximately one worker per farm. Since March, total job losses among the 275 surveyed farms was 900 – 39 percent of the total labor on those farms.
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institution CGIAR Consortium
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Burmese
publishDate 2020
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spelling CGSpace1438212025-11-06T06:32:00Z Monitoring the impact of COVID-19 in Myanmar: Yangon peri-urban poultry farmers - Late June 2020 survey round Fang, Peixun Belton, Ben Ei Win, Hnin Zhang, Xiaobo poultry urban farmers covid-19 farmers economic recovery livestock products food consumption food prices poultry farming cash flow broiler chickens With increasing demand for chicken, the reopening rate of broiler farms in June has overtaken closures. Their challenges have switched from the demand side to the supply side due to a shortage of day-old-chicks. However, more layer farms closed in June than previously. The share of layer farms that are operational decreased from 90 to 85 percent with further decreases expected. Cash flow remains the main driver of poultry farms closures. Even though most operational farms did not have problems selling their products due to increasing demand, cash flow remains a problem for them. In the second half of June, cash flow slightly improved for boiler farms, while it slightly worsened for layer farms. The price of broilers peaked at 5,350 MMK/viss in early June due to a supply shortage. Since then, the price has fallen to around 4,000 MMK/viss with recent increases in supply. Supply shortages of day-old broiler chicks was the main problem that prevented broiler farms from fully recovering their operational capacity. Some broiler farms expect their total revenue to increase, while others expect a decrease. In the past two weeks, the number of hired regular workers in operational poultry farms has further decreased by approximately one worker per farm. Since March, total job losses among the 275 surveyed farms was 900 – 39 percent of the total labor on those farms. 2020-05-01 2024-05-22T12:17:12Z 2024-05-22T12:17:12Z Brief https://hdl.handle.net/10568/143821 en my Open Access application/pdf application/pdf International Food Policy Research Institute Fang, Peixun; Belton, Ben; Ei Win, Hnin; and Zhang, Xiaobo. 2020. Monitoring the impact of COVID-19 in Myanmar: Yangon peri-urban poultry farmers - Late June 2020 survey round. Myanmar SSP Policy Note 13. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI). https://doi.org/10.2499/p15738coll2.133810.
spellingShingle poultry
urban farmers
covid-19
farmers
economic recovery
livestock products
food consumption
food prices
poultry farming
cash flow
broiler chickens
Fang, Peixun
Belton, Ben
Ei Win, Hnin
Zhang, Xiaobo
Monitoring the impact of COVID-19 in Myanmar: Yangon peri-urban poultry farmers - Late June 2020 survey round
title Monitoring the impact of COVID-19 in Myanmar: Yangon peri-urban poultry farmers - Late June 2020 survey round
title_full Monitoring the impact of COVID-19 in Myanmar: Yangon peri-urban poultry farmers - Late June 2020 survey round
title_fullStr Monitoring the impact of COVID-19 in Myanmar: Yangon peri-urban poultry farmers - Late June 2020 survey round
title_full_unstemmed Monitoring the impact of COVID-19 in Myanmar: Yangon peri-urban poultry farmers - Late June 2020 survey round
title_short Monitoring the impact of COVID-19 in Myanmar: Yangon peri-urban poultry farmers - Late June 2020 survey round
title_sort monitoring the impact of covid 19 in myanmar yangon peri urban poultry farmers late june 2020 survey round
topic poultry
urban farmers
covid-19
farmers
economic recovery
livestock products
food consumption
food prices
poultry farming
cash flow
broiler chickens
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/143821
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AT eiwinhnin monitoringtheimpactofcovid19inmyanmaryangonperiurbanpoultryfarmerslatejune2020surveyround
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