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Food and biosecurity: livestock production and towards a world free of foot-and-mouth disease

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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 FMD-endemic 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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Notes

  1. See, for example, Thompson et al. (2002); FAO (2002) for economic impacts of actual incursions and Productivity Commission (2002) for that of hypothetical incursions in FMD free countries. A thorough literature review on these economic impacts is provided by Knight-Jones and Rushton (2013).

  2. Cook et al. (2011), Gohin and Rault (2013), Hauser and McCarthy (2009) and Thompson and Tebbens (2007) are good examples of this kind of work.

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Acknowledgments

Thanks to Dr. Van Dang Ky, Department of Animal Health, Vietnam, for valuable comments. Partial funding from the Centre of Excellence for Biosecurity Risk Analysis at the University of Melbourne is also greatly appreciated.

This paper was part of a workshop sponsored by the OECD Co-operative Research Programme on Biological Resource Management for Sustainable Agricultural Systems.

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Kompas, T., Nguyen, H.T.M. & Ha, P.V. Food and biosecurity: livestock production and towards a world free of foot-and-mouth disease. Food Sec. 7, 291–302 (2015). https://doi.org/10.1007/s12571-015-0436-y

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