Appropriate global strategies for developing animal agriculture

Livestock play a vital role in economic Development-particularly as socities, evolve from subsistence agriculture into cash-based economies. On a global basis, animal products - meat, milk, eggs and fiber - constitute about 40 percent of the total value of agriculture output. This proportional contr...

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Main Author: Fitzhugh, H.A.
Format: Conference Paper
Language:Inglés
Published: Alberta University 1993
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/50189
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author Fitzhugh, H.A.
author_browse Fitzhugh, H.A.
author_facet Fitzhugh, H.A.
author_sort Fitzhugh, H.A.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Livestock play a vital role in economic Development-particularly as socities, evolve from subsistence agriculture into cash-based economies. On a global basis, animal products - meat, milk, eggs and fiber - constitute about 40 percent of the total value of agriculture output. This proportional contribution is about 50 percent in developed regions and 25 percent in developing regions. In developing regions, livestock provide major additional contributions to agriculture through draft power and manure for fuel and fertilizer. The growth markets for livestock products are in the developing regions. Improvements in livestock productivity are necessary to meet the substantial increase in demand for livestock products - especially in developing regions. However, it's neither appropriate nor sustainable to achieve these increase by mining the fragile natural resource base at the expense of futur generations. It is here that there is greatest need for research and technology transfer. Increasingly global strategies for livestock Development must consider the environmental impact and the inter-regional economics of production and marketing. Improved livestock productivity supporting economic Development and sustainable rational resource management are not incompatible goals. Inter-regional trade and market Development must consider differences in comparative and competitive advantage, which often do not coincide. Subsidies, price controls, trade barriers and other factors can neutralize comparative advantage of developing countries for low cost livestock production. Animal agriculture can be a positive factor in long term, sustainable agriculture by incorporating adequate economic returns to livestock farmers; maintainance of natural resources and productivity; minimal adverse environmental effects; optimial production with minimal external inputs; and satisfaction of food income as well as social needs.
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spelling CGSpace501892016-05-30T17:53:03Z Appropriate global strategies for developing animal agriculture Fitzhugh, H.A. animal production agriculture livestock economics research development ecology meat marketing Livestock play a vital role in economic Development-particularly as socities, evolve from subsistence agriculture into cash-based economies. On a global basis, animal products - meat, milk, eggs and fiber - constitute about 40 percent of the total value of agriculture output. This proportional contribution is about 50 percent in developed regions and 25 percent in developing regions. In developing regions, livestock provide major additional contributions to agriculture through draft power and manure for fuel and fertilizer. The growth markets for livestock products are in the developing regions. Improvements in livestock productivity are necessary to meet the substantial increase in demand for livestock products - especially in developing regions. However, it's neither appropriate nor sustainable to achieve these increase by mining the fragile natural resource base at the expense of futur generations. It is here that there is greatest need for research and technology transfer. Increasingly global strategies for livestock Development must consider the environmental impact and the inter-regional economics of production and marketing. Improved livestock productivity supporting economic Development and sustainable rational resource management are not incompatible goals. Inter-regional trade and market Development must consider differences in comparative and competitive advantage, which often do not coincide. Subsidies, price controls, trade barriers and other factors can neutralize comparative advantage of developing countries for low cost livestock production. Animal agriculture can be a positive factor in long term, sustainable agriculture by incorporating adequate economic returns to livestock farmers; maintainance of natural resources and productivity; minimal adverse environmental effects; optimial production with minimal external inputs; and satisfaction of food income as well as social needs. 1993 2014-10-31T06:08:54Z 2014-10-31T06:08:54Z Conference Paper https://hdl.handle.net/10568/50189 en Limited Access Alberta University
spellingShingle animal production
agriculture
livestock
economics
research
development
ecology
meat
marketing
Fitzhugh, H.A.
Appropriate global strategies for developing animal agriculture
title Appropriate global strategies for developing animal agriculture
title_full Appropriate global strategies for developing animal agriculture
title_fullStr Appropriate global strategies for developing animal agriculture
title_full_unstemmed Appropriate global strategies for developing animal agriculture
title_short Appropriate global strategies for developing animal agriculture
title_sort appropriate global strategies for developing animal agriculture
topic animal production
agriculture
livestock
economics
research
development
ecology
meat
marketing
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/50189
work_keys_str_mv AT fitzhughha appropriateglobalstrategiesfordevelopinganimalagriculture