The decision of farmers from the tropical region of Cochabamba in Bolivia to cultivate coca instead of state-recommended alternative products
E CONOMÍA Y DESARROLLO RURAL
The decision of farmers from the tropical region of Cochabamba in Bolivia
to cultivate coca instead of state-recommended alternative products
La decisión de los agricultores del área tropical de Cochabamba (Bolivia) de
cultivar coca en lugar de los productos alternativos recomendados por el Estado
Juan Carlos Barrientos1 and Walter Schug2
Abstract: Despite national coca cultivation having
been prohibited from 1973 onwards and the rapid reduction of coca plantations up to 2000, coca is still
being cultivated in the tropical region of Cochabamba. Technical and economic aspects are responsible
for many farmers deciding to continue to cultivate
coca and not to cultivate alternative crops. Coca cultivation is technically more adaptable and less demanding than the five alternative crops analysed in
this research (pineapples, banana, passion fruit, palm
hearts and pepper). These require more input or
capital from the producers than cultivating coca as
well as more technical experience and skills on their
part. In economic terms, the demand for coca leaves
exceeds their supply, contrary to that of alternative
crops; coca prices therefore tend to increase. This is
why coca producers often obtain higher profits from
cultivating coca than by cultivating alternative crops.
Coca leaves can also be marketed relatively easily
compared to alternative products as coca purchasers
are less demanding regarding coca leaf quality, their
transport is easy and cheap and there is the possibility of quick, guaranteed sales. However, many advantages listed regarding coca cultivation in relation to
cultivating alternative crops conflict with coca being
prohibited and the fight against its cultivation.
Additional key words: alternative crops, agricultural commodities market, agrarian marketing, alternative development, comparing crop profitability
Resumen: A pesar de la prohibición estatal del cultivo de coca desde 1973 y de la reducción rápida de
las plantaciones de coca hasta 2002, este arbusto todavía se cultiva en las zonas tropicales de Cochabamba
(Bolivia). Tanto aspectos técnicos como económicos,
son responsables de que muchos agricultores se decidan por el cultivo de la coca y no por el de cultivos
alternativos. Técnicamente, el cultivo de la coca es más
adaptable y menos exigente, en comparación con los
cincocultivosalternativosanalizadosenestainvestigación: piña, banano, maracuyá, palmito y pimienta; que
requieren mayores insumos o mayor capital, así como
más experiencia y habilidades técnicas de parte de los
productores. Desde el punto de vista económico, la demanda de hojas de la coca, contrariamente a la de los
cultivos alternativos, excede a la oferta, por lo que los
precios de la coca tienden a subir. El cultivo de coca
es, en este sentido, más ventajoso, porque les deja a los
agricultoresmayoresingresosqueaquéllosquereciben
de los cultivos alternativos. La comercialización de las
hojas de la coca, así como su transporte, es relativamente fácil, principalmente por la escasa exigencia de
calidad por parte de los compradores. La posibilidad
de venta rápida –y, en cierta medida, garantizada– de
las hojas de coca favorece claramente su cultivo, comparada con la de los productos alternativos. Sin embargo, muchas de las ventajas mencionadas del cultivo
de coca, respecto a las de los cultivos alternativos, se
ven desfavorecidas por la prohibición y el combate a
los cultivos de coca por parte del estado.
Palabras claves adicionales: cultivos alternativos, mercado agrario, mercadeo agrario, desarrollo
alternativo, comparación de beneficios entre cultivos
Fecha de recepción: 10 de noviembre de 2005
Aceptado para publicación: 11 de mayo de 2006
1
2
Profesor asistente, Facultad de Agronomía, Universidad Nacional de Colombia, Bogotá. e-mail:
Profesor, Instituto para Política Agraria, Investigación de Mercado y Sociología Económica, Universidad de Bonn (Alemania). e-mail:
Agronomía Colombiana 24(1): 147-157, 2006
Introduction
AN AREA OF APPROXIMATELY 2,500-3,000 HA was being cultivated for coca in the tropical colonised region
of Cochabamba until the early 1970s (CIDRE, 1989). It
covered the population’s “traditional” consumption,
particularly that of the rural population. Despite a Law
passed in 1973 (Barrientos, 2005) restricting coca cultivation in non-traditional areas (the major area of coca
cultivation in this region), the total cultivated area gradually expanded from the mid 1970s onwards, reaching its
peak of around 40,000 ha in 1989. The government had
already intervened against such expansion some years
before.TheProdes(inspanish,ProyectodedesarrolloChapare-Yungas)developmentprojectwasimplementedwithout success between 1975 and 1980. Between 1981 and
1985 the government again tried to reduce coca fields
by introducing a voluntary and compulsory reduction
programme (the new “controlled substances law”) but
this also led to no positive results. From 1986 to the early
1990s the government first carried out “the three-year
fight against drugs’ plan” followed by the “the integral
development and substitution plan”; both had little success in reducing coca production (Barrientos, 2005).
Law 1008 (coca regime and controlled substances
law) was intended to reduce and control coca cultivation through a new alternative development programme based on controlling the production, transport
and marketing of coca leaves, substituting coca cultivation for legal crops and controlling cocaine production
and trafficking (Cardozo et al., 1999; Rojas, 2002). This
programme’s first years promoted an understanding of
the crops which might replace coca being planted and
the methods pertaining to such substitution. There was
a massive introduction of selected crops such as pineapples, banana, passion fruit, palm (for palm hearts) and
pepper at the beginning of the 1990s.
While the area devoted to legal crops increased (reaching about 24,000 ha during 2002), coca plantations in
this region had become reduced to about 7,500 ha by
2002 (Dai-Concade, 2003; Barrientos, 2005). Following the boom in alternative crops, farmers again began
to cultivate coca from 2000 in contravention of Law
1008 so that the area covered by coca fields was around
28,000 ha in 2005. Numerous factors are responsible for
continued coca production.This research analysed pertinent technical and economic aspects to ascertain why
farmers choose to remain imbrued in the coca culture.
A technical and economic comparison is made between
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producing and marketing coca and alternative crops to
establish the most influential factors determining why
farmers continue to cultivate coca.
Methodology
This study was based on documental and descriptive
research. Quantitative (secondary data) and qualitative
data were considered when analysing the problem. Cultivatingbananas,palmhearths,passionfruit,pineapples
and pepper (being five important alternative crops in
this development programme) was compared to coca to
est (...truncated)