1월 16, 2019
Pig farmers are hesitating to start even family-owned businesses despite higher prices staying stable for over six months. Insiders, meanwhile, offer mixed verdicts on the state of the industry, which they say lacks regulation.
The price of live pigs has remained stable at 9,000 to 9,200 riel ($2.25 to $2.30) per kg since the second quarter of last year, said the Cambodia Livestock Raisers Association.
The association’s deputy director Chet Phirum said on Monday that farmers may start raising pigs again as the price has been stable for a long period, while imports from Vietnam have declined.
“There is hope for our pig farmers. They are starting to farm pigs again since prices are holding steady,” he said.
Pig price drop in 2015
Ly Laville, the general manager of M’s Pig ACMC (Cambodia) Co Ltd, the pig farm owned by the Mong Reththy Group, told The Post in May last year that pig prices declined from 8,000 to 4,000 riel per kg in 2015.
He said the decline was triggered when China, the world’s biggest pork consumer, stopped importing pigs from Vietnam, citing quality concerns. Laville said cheap livestock then flooded into the Kingdom.
After some three years of unprofitable prices, the value of pigs doubled during the second quarter of last year.
Industry insiders said the price rise was due to a falling supply of imports from Vietnam, which they said had dominated the market for years.http://www.phnompenhpost.com/business/pig-farmers-afraid-open-shop