Spilt milk: The woes of dairy farmers
Once believed to be the harbinger of the ‘White Revolution’, lifting the country or at least rural Punjab out of poverty, there is great flux in the dairy sector today despite its many successes. In the last decade or so, the processing industry has not been able to grow beyond six to seven percent of total milk production. Non-dairy products, disguised as milk goods, have mushroomed at breathtaking speed, even replacing milk in the market. Massive and cheap import of the skimmed milk powder (SMP) has hit the very basis of livestock farming, throwing many out of the very business. These issues are in addition to a long list of structural issues that have afflicted the sector for the past seven decades.
Last month, the World Bank (WB) under its upcoming fresh loan programme ‘Strengthening Markets for Agriculture and Rural Transformation in Punjab (SMART Punjab)-Programme for Results (PforR)’ noted that livestock development in Punjab has been largely stagnant over the past decade. The WB makes the claim that production increase is a result of herd size having increased rather than productivity having increased. It also observed that small dairy farmers are hardly integrated in the formal economy, and further, that institutional strengthening is the need of the hour.
Much of the murkiness around the dairy sector stems from an inaccurate assessment of numbers — of farmers, animal population, cattle sizes and so on. The last livestock census was carried out in 2006; it ought to have been conducted last year, 2016, after a period of 10 years. Numbers that exist today are all estimates — including statistics released in the Pakistan Economic Survey, 2015 — 2016.
Despite being the third largest producer of milk in the world, Pakistan has been importing dry milk and whey powder
The absence of reliable numbers has, in turn, had a profound impact on policy and planning. Official circles, particularly in Punjab, added a new layer of confusion back in 2015 when its official denied the federal government’s estimates on animal population in Punjab and, by extension, milk production figures — hitherto accepted as true by both national and international agencies. The problems of the diary sector have grown faster than the sector.
As the situation stands right now, no one seems satisfied. The industry bemoans the highest cost of milk production in the region, which hinders its expansion at the desired speed. Farmers say that the industry does not pay them enough to keep farming alive because the government has facilitated cheaper import options than buying local milk. The end result: Despite being the third largest producer of milk in the world, Pakistan has been importing dry milk and whey powder.