Trends in Vietnam's pork supply and structural features of its pig sector

Type Journal Article - The open area studies journal
Title Trends in Vietnam's pork supply and structural features of its pig sector
Author(s)
Volume 2
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2009
Page numbers 52-71
URL http://benthamopen.com/contents/pdf/TOARSJ/TOARSJ-2-52.pdf
Abstract
Pork is the single most important source of animal protein in Vietnam and its availability has a substantial impact
on the well-being of the Vietnamese. Since 1996, the local supply and per capita availability of pork in Vietnam have
increased substantially. The trends in and sources of this growth in supply are identified by analysing official statistics.
Differences in regional supply of pork are also identified, as well as regional variations in pork yields. Vietnam’s pork industry
relies on many small-scale household producers for the bulk of its pork supply. The structure of the sector is investigated
and found to be altering slowly – a slight increase in scale of production units has been occurring. The rate of
growth in Vietnam’s supply of pork has slowed and production could decline despite the large increases in productivity in
this sector since the mid-1990s. The industry is still not internationally competitive. Hence, imports of pork from Canada
and the USA occurred in the last few years, and these may increase after 2012 when Vietnam should become World Trade
Organization (WTO)-compliant. This concerns the Government of Vietnam because it could threaten the economic
sustainability of its pig industry. The Government believes that by adopting policies to increase the scale of production of
individual pig-producing units, this will shore up the competitive position of its pig sector. This policy is discussed.

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