Food and biosecurity: livestock production and towards a world free of foot-and-mouth disease
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Kompas, Tom
Nguyen, Hoa Thi Minh
Ha, Pham Van
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Springer Verlag (Germany)
Abstract
A key challenge for global livestock production is
the prevalence of infectious animal diseases. These diseases
result in low productivity in meat and dairy production, culled
animals, and significant barriers to trade and lost income from
meat and meat products. Foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) affects
both developing countries, where it is often endemic and
very costly, and developed countries where incursions result
in considerable economic losses in the order of billions of
dollars per year. In some cases, production levels of pork meat
in developed countries have still not recovered to levels prior
to past disease incursions, more than a decade ago. In developing
countries, the export of animal products has exhibited
sluggish growth for decades, constrained by ongoing animal
disease problems. We make three contributions. First, we provide
an overview of worldwide meat production, consumption
and trade in the context of FMD. Second, we provide insights
into the economics of biosecurity measures and how these
activities should be optimally designed to enhance livestock
production. Third, we analyse a case study of an FMDendemic
country, Vietnam, which has been trying to achieve
FMD-free status for some time. Lessons learnt from this case
study shed light on the challenges in achieving FMD-free
status in developing countries, which is useful for a global
FMD control strategy and the promotion of world food
security.
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Food Security
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