<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?><article xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance">
<front>
<journal-meta>
<journal-id>0123-885X</journal-id>
<journal-title><![CDATA[Revista de Estudios Sociales]]></journal-title>
<abbrev-journal-title><![CDATA[rev.estud.soc.]]></abbrev-journal-title>
<issn>0123-885X</issn>
<publisher>
<publisher-name><![CDATA[Facultad de Ciencias Sociales, Universidad de los Andes]]></publisher-name>
</publisher>
</journal-meta>
<article-meta>
<article-id>S0123-885X2008000100006</article-id>
<title-group>
<article-title xml:lang="es"><![CDATA[Mucha res y poco cerdo: el consumo de la carne en Colombia]]></article-title>
<article-title xml:lang="en"><![CDATA[When Beef Was King. Or Why Do Colombians Eat so Little Pork?: o consumo da carne na Colômbia]]></article-title>
<article-title xml:lang="pt"><![CDATA[Muita carne de vaca e pouca de porco]]></article-title>
</title-group>
<contrib-group>
<contrib contrib-type="author">
<name>
<surname><![CDATA[Van Ausdal]]></surname>
<given-names><![CDATA[Shawn]]></given-names>
</name>
<xref ref-type="aff" rid="A01"/>
</contrib>
</contrib-group>
<aff id="A01">
<institution><![CDATA[,University of California  ]]></institution>
<addr-line><![CDATA[ ]]></addr-line>
</aff>
<pub-date pub-type="pub">
<day>00</day>
<month>04</month>
<year>2008</year>
</pub-date>
<pub-date pub-type="epub">
<day>00</day>
<month>04</month>
<year>2008</year>
</pub-date>
<numero>29</numero>
<fpage>86</fpage>
<lpage>103</lpage>
<copyright-statement/>
<copyright-year/>
<self-uri xlink:href="http://www.scielo.org.co/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&amp;pid=S0123-885X2008000100006&amp;lng=en&amp;nrm=iso"></self-uri><self-uri xlink:href="http://www.scielo.org.co/scielo.php?script=sci_abstract&amp;pid=S0123-885X2008000100006&amp;lng=en&amp;nrm=iso"></self-uri><self-uri xlink:href="http://www.scielo.org.co/scielo.php?script=sci_pdf&amp;pid=S0123-885X2008000100006&amp;lng=en&amp;nrm=iso"></self-uri><abstract abstract-type="short" xml:lang="es"><p><![CDATA[Este artículo busca explicar por qué los colombianos han comido más carne de res que de cerdo en comparación con otros latinoamericanos. Comienza examinando el desarrollo de una tradición culinaria que favorece la carne de res. El eje central del argumento, sin embargo, es que la carne de res ha sido, históricamente, bastante más barata que la de cerdo. Esta diferencia de precio está ligada al alto costo del maíz, que suele emplearse para la ceba de cerdos, debido a la baja productividad de la agricultura colombiana. Otros factores que favorecieron a la carne de res incluyen una frontera agraria en retroceso, una población de cerdos pequeña, las ventajas de la ganadería, la monopolización de la tierra, la influencia de la importación de manteca de cerdo y el desarrollo de una industria de aceite vegetal.]]></p></abstract>
<abstract abstract-type="short" xml:lang="en"><p><![CDATA[This article seeks to understand why Colombians, compared to many other Latin Americans, have traditionally eaten so much more beef than pork. The article first pointstothe development of a culinary tradition thatfavored beef. The bulkof the argument, though, centers on the fact that, historically, beef has been substantially cheaper than pork. This price difference, in turn, is rooted in the low productivity of Colombian agriculture, which made corn, often used to fatten hogs, expensive. Additional factors that favored beef include a receding agrarian frontier, a small hog population, the various advantages of cattle, a conflictridden history of land monopolization, and the influence of lard imports and the subsequent development of a vegetable oil industry.]]></p></abstract>
<abstract abstract-type="short" xml:lang="pt"><p><![CDATA[O objetivo deste artigo é explicar o motivo pelo qual os colombianos vêm comendo mais carne de vaca do que de porco em comparação com outros latinoamericanos. O texto começa examinando o desenvolvimento de uma tradição culinária que privilegia a carne de vaca. No entanto, o eixo central do argumento é que a carne de vaca tem sido historicamente muito mais econômica do que a de porco. Esta diferença de preço tem relação com o alto custo do milho, que costuma ser empregado para o engorde dos porcos, devido à baixa produtividade da agricultura colombiana. Outros fatores que favoreceram a tradição culinária da carne são: o contexto de uma fronteira agrária em retrocesso, uma baixa população de porcos, a vantagem da pecuária, a monopolização da terra, a influência da importação da banha de porco e o desenvolvimento de uma indústria de óleo vegetal.]]></p></abstract>
<kwd-group>
<kwd lng="es"><![CDATA[Consumo de carne]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="es"><![CDATA[estudios de la comida]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="es"><![CDATA[cría de cerdos]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="es"><![CDATA[ganadería]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="es"><![CDATA[agricultura]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="es"><![CDATA[Colombia]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[Meat consumption]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[food studies]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[hog raising]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[cattle ranching]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[agriculture]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="en"><![CDATA[Colombia]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="pt"><![CDATA[Consumo de carne]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="pt"><![CDATA[estudos da comida]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="pt"><![CDATA[criação de porcos]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="pt"><![CDATA[pecuária]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="pt"><![CDATA[agricultura]]></kwd>
<kwd lng="pt"><![CDATA[Colombia]]></kwd>
</kwd-group>
</article-meta>
</front><body><![CDATA[  <font face="Verdana" size="2">     <p align="center"><font size="4">Mucha res y poco cerdo: el consumo de la carne en Colombia</font>*</p>     <p align="center"><font size="3">When Beef Was King. Or Why Do Colombians Eat so Little   Pork?</font></p>     <p align="center"><font size="3">Muita carne de vaca e pouca de porco: o consumo da carne na   Col&ocirc;mbia</font></p>     <p><b>Shawn Van Ausdal</b>**</p>     <p>* I want to thank Alberto Fl&oacute;rez, Stefania Gallini,   Ingrid Bol&iacute;var, and Luis Guillermo Baptiste for stimulating discussions about   meat consumption in Colombia, and planting the seed from which this article   eventually grew. I also want to acknowledge Juan Ignacio Arboleda for his   assistance in researching this piece; and thank Claudia Leal, Alejandro Guar&iacute;n,   and two anonymous reviewers fortheir helpful comments on earlier versions of   this article.</p>     <p> ** Ph.D. candidate, Dept. of Geography, University of   California, Berkeley. Currently finishing an historical geography of cattle   ranching in Colombia, and recently published Medio Siglo de Geograf&iacute;a Hist&oacute;rica   en Norteam&eacute;rica in Historia Cr&iacute;tica, 32(2006). E-mail: <a href="mailto:s_vanausdal@yahoo.com">s_vanausdal@yahoo.com</a></p> <hr size="1">     <p><b>Resumen</b></p>       <p>   Este art&iacute;culo busca explicar por qu&eacute; los colombianos   han comido m&aacute;s carne de res que de cerdo en comparaci&oacute;n con otros   latinoamericanos. Comienza examinando el desarrollo de una tradici&oacute;n culinaria   que favorece la carne de res. El eje central del argumento, sin embargo, es que   la carne de res ha sido, hist&oacute;ricamente, bastante m&aacute;s barata que la de cerdo.   Esta diferencia de precio est&aacute; ligada al alto costo del ma&iacute;z, que suele   emplearse para la ceba de cerdos, debido a la baja productividad de la   agricultura colombiana. Otros factores que favorecieron a la carne de res   incluyen una frontera agraria en retroceso, una poblaci&oacute;n de cerdos peque&ntilde;a, las   ventajas de la ganader&iacute;a, la monopolizaci&oacute;n de la tierra, la influencia de la   importaci&oacute;n de manteca de cerdo y el desarrollo de una industria de aceite   vegetal.     <p><b>Palabras clave</b>: Consumo de carne, estudios de la comida, cr&iacute;a de   cerdos, ganader&iacute;a, agricultura, Colombia.</p>  <hr size="1">        ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p><b>   Abstract</b></p>       <p>   This article seeks to understand why   Colombians, compared to many other Latin Americans, have traditionally eaten so   much more beef than pork. The article first pointstothe development of a   culinary tradition thatfavored beef. The bulkof the argument, though, centers on   the fact that, historically, beef has been substantially cheaper than pork. This   price difference, in turn, is rooted in the low productivity of Colombian   agriculture, which made corn, often used to fatten hogs, expensive. Additional   factors that favored beef include a receding agrarian frontier, a small hog   population, the various advantages of cattle, a conflictridden history of land   monopolization, and the influence of lard imports and the subsequent development   of a vegetable oil industry.       <p><b>Key words</b>: Meat consumption, food studies, hog raising, cattle   ranching, agriculture, Colombia.</p>   <hr size="1">     <p><b>Resumo </b></p>       <p>O objetivo deste artigo &eacute; explicar o motivo pelo qual os colombianos v&ecirc;m   comendo mais carne de vaca do que de porco em compara&ccedil;&atilde;o com outros   latinoamericanos. O texto come&ccedil;a examinando o desenvolvimento de uma tradi&ccedil;&atilde;o   culin&aacute;ria que privilegia a carne de vaca. No entanto, o eixo central do   argumento &eacute; que a carne de vaca tem sido historicamente muito mais econ&ocirc;mica do   que a de porco. Esta diferen&ccedil;a de pre&ccedil;o tem rela&ccedil;&atilde;o com o alto custo do milho,   que costuma ser empregado para o engorde dos porcos, devido &agrave; baixa   produtividade da agricultura colombiana. Outros fatores que favoreceram a   tradi&ccedil;&atilde;o culin&aacute;ria da carne s&atilde;o: o contexto de uma fronteira agr&aacute;ria em   retrocesso, uma baixa popula&ccedil;&atilde;o de porcos, a vantagem da pecu&aacute;ria, a   monopoliza&ccedil;&atilde;o da terra, a influ&ecirc;ncia da importa&ccedil;&atilde;o da banha de porco e o   desenvolvimento de uma ind&uacute;stria de &oacute;leo vegetal.     <p><b>Palavras chave</b>: Consumo de carne; estudos da comida, cria&ccedil;&atilde;o de   porcos, pecu&aacute;ria, agricultura, Colombia.</p>  <hr size="1">     <p>In 2007, Colombia ceased to be primarily a beef- eating nation (El Tiempo,   2007).<sup><a href="#1">1</a></sup> The change was significant. For generations,   possibly even since the early colonial period, Colombians consumed much more   beef than any other meat. For every pound of lechona, fritanga, chicharr&oacute;n, or   other form of pork that Colombians have savored since the late-nineteenth   century, they have eaten between five and seven pounds of beef (see <a href="#f1">Figure 1</a>).   To give some perspective, in the United States, the ratio of pork-to-beef   consumption has been about 1-to- 1.5 since 1950 (Skaggs, 1986, pp. 166167;   FAOSTAT, 2007). Even in Latin America, which has long been cattle country,   Colombia's beef-heavy meat diet has been extreme. At least since 1960,   Colombians have been, in relative terms, the largest beef-eaters in tropical   Latin America (see <a href="#f2">Figures 2</a> and <a href="#f3"> 3</a>). (They have also been, in absolute terms,   one of the largest beef consumers per capita in the region.) Consequently,   Colombians have consumed much less pork, proportionally, than many other Latin   Americans. Whereas pork has comprised between a fifth and a third of the meat   diet in Brazil and Mexico since 1950, in Colombia it has hovered around ten   percent (United Nations, 1962, p. 45; United Nations, 1964, p. 50; Jarvis, 1986,   p. 2; FAOSTAT, 2007). This article marks the end of an era by asking two related   questions: why, historically, have Colombians eaten so little pork? And what   accounted for the long predominance of beef?</p>       <p>   Although a variety of   factors converged to make Colombia a beef-eating nation, I suggest that it was   the historic high cost of pork that played a fundamental role. Much of this   article, therefore, is an effort to explain why beef has been cheaper than pork.   I argue that, in the case of Colombia since the mid-nineteenth century, it was   not cheap, natural grasslands that made beef less expensive, as commonly   suggested, but the low productivity of Colombian agriculture. What I consciously   downplay here is the cultural or social status that beef may have had in   determining meat consumption patterns. In fact, this article originated in a   frustrated effort to identify pro-beef discourses in the first half of the   twentieth century (Fl&oacute;rez, forthcoming). To explain why Colombians eat so much   more beef than pork, I turn away from recent trends in food studies, which   underline the symbolic aspects and cultural politics of food, to emphasize   production and price (Watson and Caldwell, 2005). It is possible that the   symbolic value of beef played a greater role than I allow, but overall I do not   think that it was that critical.</p>       <p>   Three general ideas structure this   paper. Lest I get too carried away with my price-centered argument, in the first   section I examine the development of a culinary tradition that favored beef.   There are hints of a deeply-rooted tradition of meat consumption in Colombia,   despite the obvious social inequalities and important variations over time and   space. Since beef appears to have been the most common meat, a form of dietary   inertia developed around it. Tradition, however, can only explain so much. In   the second section, therefore, I turn to the comparative advantage of grass. My   argument, as noted above, is that the historic predominance of beef largely   stemmed from the high cost of pork, which in turn was a consequence of the high   cost of corn and the low productivity of Colombian agriculture. Despite the   recurring criticisms of Colombian ranching as extensive and inefficient, grass   and cattle gave beef some advantages over other meats. In the last section, I   examine how the agrarian structure and government policies also conspired   against a richer tradition of pork consumption: the former by constraining   peasant production; the latter by undercutting the market for lard.</p>       <p><b>   A   tradition of beef</b></p>       ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p>   Tradition is a tricky word since many so-called   traditions are actually practices of fairly recent origin that were &quot;invented&quot;   to naturalize specific interests (Hobsbawm and Ranger, 1992). Nonetheless, in   this section I suggest that part of the historic predominance of beef   consumption in Colombia has to do simply with the development of a culinary   tradition in which beef played an important role: Colombians have favored beef   because it is what they grew up eating, what they learned to cook, and what they   came to expect.</p>       <p>   The Colombian taste for beef emerged within a wider Latin   American tradition stretching back to the early colonial period. It is possible   that the Spanish exported a penchant for beef from Andalusia along with the   cultural practice of raising cattle from horseback on the open range (Bishko,   1952; Jordan, 1993). But key to the place of beef in colonial diets was the   rapid proliferation of cattle in New World environments. Free from major   predators, Old World diseases, and ecological competition, cattle multiplied   quickly on the region's grasslands. The precipitous decline of native   populations, in part a result of growing herds, opened up yet more space for   livestock and helped create an abundance of animals relative to consumers   (Crosby, 1972; Melville, 1994). In some areas, such as the Pampas and Northern   Mexico, local residents could not eat all the cattle they culled. There, they   extracted more value from hides and tallow than meat (Pilcher, 2006, p. 30;   Barsky and Gelman, 2001, p. 59). Even outside these areas, beef consumption   could be remarkably high. European visitors were often astonished at the large   quantities of meat that Latin Americans ate (Pilcher, 2006, p. 18). Colonial   Caracas, for instance, is said to have consumed 50 percent more beef than Paris   even though it had only ten percent of the population (Rifkin, 1992, p.   49).</p>       <p>   Not everyone, however, had easy access to beef or other kinds of   meat. Although cattle adapted to a wide variety of environments, they did not   multiply with the same fecundity everywhere. For instance, cattle herds expanded   more slowly on the Llanos, the great natural grasslands of Colombia and   Venezuela (characterized by climatic extremes of searing heat and flooding,   abundant but poor quality grasses, and natural predators), than in the temperate   and benign Pampas (Crosby, 1972; Rausch, 1984; Rausch 1993). In many other   regions, vast tracts of tropical forest limited the geographic and biological   expansion of cattle. The miners of northeastern Antioquia, therefore, ate cattle   bred in the distant Valle del Cauca, fattened on the highland pastures of   Rionegro, and driven to slaughter in the mines amidst lowland forests (West,   1952, pp. 11215; Parsons, 1968, pp. 12728). Also, the initial population   explosion did not last indefinitely: as their pressure on rangelands increased,   the growth rates of herds tapered. By the late-eighteenth century, a growing   demand for cattle -from expanding human populations, economic growth, and   increased trade- began to squeeze existing stocks, causing prices to rise rather   substantially (Sourdis, 1996, pp. 4445; Brungardt, 1974; Pilcher, 2006, pp.   2728). Beef, therefore, was not always in great abundance and inexpensive.   Jeffrey Pilcher (2006, pp. 16, 22) reminds us that while the Mexican elite dined   on exaggerated quantities of meat, the rural poor retained a largely vegetarian   diet that pre-dated the Spanish conquest. In Colombia, highland peasants also   appear to have eaten little meat up to the end of the nineteenth century   (Camacho Rold&aacute;n, 1946, p. 131; Meisel and Vega, 2004, p.   12).</p>       <p>   Nonetheless, there is scattered evidence to suggest that meat   consumption in Colombia was fairly widespread. While the overall quantities may   have been small, and consumption erratic, I suspect that it was sufficient to   make meat -particularly beef- a key component of the national diet and culinary   imagination. Robert West (1952, p. 112), in his study of mining in colonial   Colombia, was surprised at the &quot;large quantity of meat&quot; that miners ate. Mining   ordinances from the seventeenth century required that Indian laborers be given   12 pounds of meat each per week (West, 1952, p. 95; Calero, 1997, p. 147; see   also Taussig, 1977, p. 403; Hamilton, 1993, p. 291, 312). Even if the ordinances   were not enforced, the stipulation that daily rations include almost two pounds   of meat underlines its abundance. The half-rations of meat stipulated in case of   a siege of Cartagena in the mid-eighteenth century (for the militia, artisans,   and workers) included six ounces of beef and two ounces of bacon (tocino) per   day (Dorta, 1962, pp. 351-352). Fray Juan de Santa Gertrudis (Serra, 1994, pp.   67-68) remarked that for &quot;ordinary people&quot; of the coastal lowlands &quot;the common   food.... is generally just a stew of beef jerky and...yucca, arracacha, sweet   potato, cassava or &ntilde;ame root and sapallo<sup><a href="#2">2</a></sup>.&quot; Other   eighteenth -and nineteenth-century accounts also note that meals outside the   highlands were &quot;almost always accompanied by a piece of beef, no matter how dry   and hard it might be&quot; (Hettner, 1976, p. 219; see also Vargas, 1944, pp. 1112;   Holton, 1967, pp. 2526, 198; Striffler, 1994, p. 175; Hamilton, 1993,pp. 40, 62,   115, 335). For the highlands, Vargas (1944, pp. 136-137) calculated that an   ordinary daily ration in a hospital in Zipaquir&aacute; should include one pound of   beef and one ounce of bacon, but he acknowledged that many people would be   unable to afford it. Urban laborers appear to have eaten some meat, but by most   ac counts highland peasants consumed little (Boussingault, 1994,pp.   365,367).</p>       <p>   The expansion of the export economy from the mid- nineteenth   century did much to increase beef consumption and solidify its place in the   culinary imagination. The demand for workers in the tobacco fields and on public   works projects increased wages in both the lowlands and highlands and   &quot;introduced beef consumption to the working class&quot; (Camacho Rold&aacute;n, 1946, p.   167; Rivas, 1983, p. 212; Nieto Arteta, 1996, pp. 262263). Towards the end of   the century, Camacho Rold&aacute;n (1946, p. 164) thought that beef consumption was   &quot;one of the items whose consumption has improved notably...&quot; (see also Arboleda,   1905, pp. 96116). By this time, cattle ranchers knew that good coffee prices   translated into robust demand for their animals (APNOyC, [Folder] 170, p. 473;   APNOyC, 200, p. 364). Daily rations for agricultural laborers in Antioquia   included between two and eight ounces of beef; miners could get 24 ounces   (P&eacute;rez, 1915, p. 105; APNOyC, 200, Jan. 13, 1916 and Jan. 14, 1916; Poveda,   1979, p. 120; Brew, 2000, p. 174). The department of Bol&iacute;var even provided   prisoners in the jail in Cartagena with half-a-pound of meat per day.<sup><a href="#3">3</a></sup> A taste for beef also likely spread through the rations   that soldiers received (and requisitioned) in the frequent civil wars of the   nineteenth century.<sup><a href="#4">4</a></sup> By the early-twentieth century,   the general pattern of meat consumption that would last for much of the rest of   the century, both in terms of quantity and kind, was already well-established   (see <a href="#f1">Figure 1</a>).<sup><a href="#5">5</a></sup></p>       <p>   The above consumption rates   are somewhat misleading, though. They suggest, multiplied over the course of a   year, that some Colombian laborers and even prisoners ate more meat, and   considerably more beef, than most Europeans at the time (Holmes, 1916, pp.   271-73; see Hettner 1976, p. 93). Most Colombians, however, did not eat   half-a-pound of meat daily. From 1915 to 1927, it was more on the order of one   to one-and-a-half ounces of meat per day on a per capita basis (Departamento de   Contralor&iacute;a, 1930, p. 459). This discrepancy between daily rations that were   significantly higher than the national per capita rate of consumption probably   stems, in good part, from the temporary and seasonal nature of much work. It is   possible that many Colombians obtained much of their meat in the form of rations   while working for others.<sup><a href="#6">6</a></sup> Therefore, even if the   average Colombian did not consume large quantities of meat, many did have at   least periodic access to it. By the turn of the twentieth century, such   recurring consumption helped beef to become a fixture -even if sometimes more   symbolic than real- in the national diet and imagination.</p>       <p>   There were, of   course, plenty of variations in the development of this tradition of beef. If   work-rations were an important source of meat for many peasants, this probably   reinforced differentiated consumption patterns by gender and age. (Although the   employment of women and children in such jobs as the coffee harvest possibly did   a good deal to include them in the circuits of meat consumption.) Regional   differences also mattered. The more dynamic regions, such as Antioquia, could   afford to provide better rations than stagnant ones, such as Boyac&aacute;. Lowland   residents also appear to have eaten more meat than highlanders, at least until   the 1930s or 40s (Hettner, 1976, p. 219; Departamento de Contralor&iacute;a, 1930, pp.   453459; Dur&aacute;n, 1882; Varela, 1952, p. 114). For some groups, therefore, the beef   tradition developed quite early; for others it solidified relatively late. Still   others, such as the descendants of slaves, might have seen their consumption   levels fall over the 19th and into the twentieth century (see Taussig, 1977, p.   403).</p>       <p>   But in general, beef and meat acquired both symbolic and real   importance in the Colombian diet. Colombians of all classes have a hard time   considering that they have had a proper meal without at least a small piece of   meat. Those who subsist principally on carbohydrates do not consider themselves   mainly vegetarian, but as meat-eaters who are forced to go without. The   centrality of meat is the reason why even poor Colombians spend a large   percentage of their income on beef (Arg&uuml;elles, 1949, p. 49; Direcci&oacute;n Nacional   de Estad&iacute;stica, 1948, p. 41; Gonz&aacute;lez, 1969, p. 45; Guar&iacute;n, this issue). And it   explains why the price of beef has periodically become an issue of key political   importance.<sup><a href="#7">7</a></sup></p>       <p>   What is still not clear,   however, is why beef predominated over other meats. Some scholars have argued   that beef has stood at the pinnacle of the food hierarchy throughout much of   Western civilization (Twigg, 1979; Fiddes, 1991; Adams, 1990; see also   Beardsworth and Keil, 1997, pp. 209217). Could it be that the Colombian (and   Latin American) tradition of beef is rooted in such a larger cultural complex?   Even though hogs multiplied more rapidly than cattle in the early colonial   period, did people, when given the chance, deliberately choose beef? There is   some evidence of an historic hierarchy of meats in Colombia. Inns and steamboats   in the nineteenth century did not serve fish because it was considered too cheap   (Holton, 1967, p. 51).<sup><a href="#8">8</a></sup> Hettner (1976, p. 110) even   remarked that in late-nineteenth- century Bogot&aacute;, &quot;pork is generally relegated   to feed the lower classes&quot;. There might also have been some wariness about pork   due to hygienic concerns (Littman, 1965). We must not assume, however, that beef   was always the &quot;elite&quot; meat. In colonial Mexico City, with its heavy Spanish   influence, mutton enjoyed this role; beef was cheaper and more plebeian   (Pilcher, 2006, pp. 9, 19, 21; for Ecuador, see Pati&ntilde;o, 2005, p. 27). In the   mid-seventeenth century, the governor of Cartagena removed the tax on beef   &quot;because it is the meat of the poor,&quot; but increased that on pork by 200 percent   (Pati&ntilde;o, 2005, p. 27). Colonial mine owners in Colombia rewarded their   administrators with ham (West, 1952, p. 116). Pork has been considered a meat   for special occasions: its consumption doubles during the end-of- the- year   festivities (Restrepo, 1988, p. 98; Mollien, 1992, p. 222).<sup><a href="#9">9</a></sup> Since at least the mid-twentieth century, it has been   well-to-do Colombians who, proportionally, have eaten the most pork (Gonz&aacute;lez,   1969, p. 41). It is not clear, therefore, that some deep cultural preference for   beef can explain its predominance (see Orlove, 1997).</p>       <p>   As I will argue in   the rest of this article, there are a variety of reasons that converged to make   beef the principal meat in Colombia. What I want to emphasize here is the role   of tradition. From early on in some places, and certainly by the end of the   nineteenth century in much of the country, meat had become a key part of a   'proper' diet. And since beef was the most-consumed meat, a culinary tradition   developed around it. People from all classes, regions, and races acquired a   preference for beef and created a repertoire of ways to prepare it. They   likewise failed to develop a wide range of pork-based dishes, as a comparison   between Mexican and Colombian cookbooks will show. Pork, therefore, had less   culinary appeal. As the manager of one hog farm remarked, &quot;people do not have   the custom of eating pork&quot; (G&oacute;mez Cu&eacute;llar, 1909, p. 196).</p>       ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p>   Too much   emphasis on tradition, however, leaves little room for change (Mennell, 1996,   pp.4-6). Since the mid-nineteenth century, there have been shifts in tastes and   culinary practices: from salted or dried to fresh beef; from boiled to   pan-fried; the slow spread of new cuts; the gradual diffusion of dishes once   restricted to elites; the phenomenal growth of chicken consumption in recent   years. But many of these are variations on a theme; the basic structure of the   cuisine remains very similar to what it was a century or more ago: a bit of meat   amidst a plethora of starches.<sup><a href="#10">10</a></sup></p>       <p>   Additionally, taste may play a role beyond the   significance of tradition: what I (sarcastically) call the culinary determinism   of beans. In many cuisines around the world, there is a propensity to pair pork   and beans: feijoada (Brazil), cassoulet (southwestern France), split-pea soup   (northern Europe),fabada (Asturias, Spain), pork-and-beans (U.S.), frisoles   (Antioquia, Colombia). Could it be that Colombians eat little pork partly   because they are not big bean eaters? Mexicans and Brazilians, for example, eat   three to four times more beans than Colombians, and they eat proportionally more   pork (FAOSTAT, 2007). In Colombia, the region that consumes the most beans   -Antioquia- is also one of the biggest consumers of pork (Varela, 1952, p. 117;   Restrepo, 1988, p. 97). It is plausible that Colombia developed such a strong   tradition of beef partly because of the availability of a wide variety of other   starches besides beans -potatoes, yucca, plantain, among many others- all of   which do well cooked in beef -rather than pork- flavored water. This pork-bean   link is not entirely consistent throughout Latin America. Chileans, for example,   eat a fair amount of pork but few beans; and Nicaraguans eat lots of beans but   little pork (FAOSTAT, 2007). By themselves, beans are not a determinant.   Nonetheless, this idea does suggest the variety of possible factors at play   behind culinary traditions and consumption patterns.</p>       <p><b>   The comparative   advantage of beef</b></p>       <p>   While tradition and beans probably played some role   in the formation of meat consumption patterns in Colombia, there is a simpler   and more fundamental factor: price. Historically, beef has been significantly   cheaper than pork. While the price data I have gathered so far is scattered, it   does show a consistent, and often substantial, premium paid for pork. In Bogot&aacute;,   between 1953 and 1965, pork was almost 20 percent more expensive than beef. In   general, however, the difference was upwards of 40 percent and sometimes it was   even higher (see <a href="#f3">Figure 3</a>). Back in the eighteenth century, pork was four times   the price of beef (Vargas, 1944, p. 90).<sup><a href="#11">11</a></sup> Given   the substantial price elasticity of meat consumption in Colombia, much of   the historic preference for beef is likely just a reflection of the higher cost   of the alternatives (Galvis, 2000). After all, if pork costs 40 percent more   than beef, the decision by a poor family of which meat to buy does not seem very   difficult. For this reason, G&oacute;mez Rueda (1936, p. 499), head of the government's   Department of Livestock, stated that &quot;if the price [of pork] were lower than it   currently is, which would allow it to compete with beef, its consumption would   increase considerably&quot;.</p>       <p>       A variety of other circumstantial evidence   also points to the importance of price. At the beginning of the twentieth   century, a number of large hog farmers from the Sabana de Bogot&aacute; noted that one   of the obstacles their industry faced was the public's penchant for beef rather   than pork. But they also realized that it would be difficult to increase pork   consumption so long as it remained more expensive (G&oacute;mez Cu&eacute;llar, 1909). Second,   studies also show that Colombians eat more pork when they have more disposable   income (Gonz&aacute;lez, 1969, p. 41). Third, the one principal exception to the price   premium for pork was in the Sin&uacute; Valley from the 1930s to the 1950s. There, hog   raising expanded after the government restricted lard imports. Instead of   shipping live hogs to the interior of the country, butchers slaughtered them   locally and tins of lard were sent inland. Without a way to transport the meat   to other markets, it had to be consumed quickly in the region. As a result, pork   became cheap enough here to be &quot;the meat of the poor.&quot;<sup><a href="#12">12</a></sup> Finally, at least since the 1960s, the price difference   between pork and beef in Mexico and Brazil has been smaller than in Colombia,   which may help explain why these two countries consume more pork (FAOSTAT,   2005).</p>       <p>         We should be careful not to place too much emphasis on   price alone, however. In Colombia, pork consumption sometimes has a quasi   U-shaped curve in which people from poorer and wealthier groups consume   proportionally more pork than those in the middle (Arg&uuml;elles, 1949, p. 47;   P&eacute;rez, 1915; Direcci&oacute;n Nacional de Estad&iacute;stica, 1948). This seeming paradox can   be explained only if we pay attention to the characteristics of the meat not   just its cost. Proportionally, wealthier people eat more pork because they can   afford it. Poorer people buy more pork because &quot;although it is generally more   expensive, it is more flavorful and can be stretched further, that is, it   enables a greater consumption of vegetables and bread&quot; (P&eacute;rez, 1915, p. 105). In   other words, the poor sometimes bought pork because of its property as a   flavoring agent rather than to eat meat per se.<sup><a href="#13">13</a></sup></p>       <p>           Nonetheless, if price does play a key role   in determining meat consumption patterns, why has beef been historically cheaper   than pork? Hogs are generally considered to be more productive than cattle: they   convert feed into flesh more efficiently; they are more prolific; they grow and   fatten faster; and they consume waste products (not only farm surplus but   inferior agricultural products with little value, waste from agricultural   processing, and kitchen scraps). Additionally, hogs can forage for themselves;   and some creole breeds (e.g., the zungo-coste&ntilde;o) did well on pasture grasses and   legumes (Direcci&oacute;n Nacional de Estad&iacute;stica, 1952, p. 17; G&oacute;mez Cu&eacute;llar, 1909;   Ospina, 1913, p. 237; Ospina, 1940; Gade, 2000, p. 537; Cronon, 1991, pp.   225-226). The advantages of raising hogs were such that most peasant households   tried to keep at least a few (CIAT, 1972, p. 92; Paris, 1946, pp. 240242; L&eacute;onet   al., 1975, p. 2). Given the low opportunity-cost of many hogs, why would pork be   more expensive than beef?</p>       <p>             The traditional answer is that Colombia,   and indeed much of Latin America, has had a comparative advantage in natural   grasslands. Ernst-Ludwig Littman (1965, p. 7), for example, noted that beef   remained cheaper than pork even when the price of grains was favorable for   raising hogs:</p>       <p>               From the biological point of view, this is a   contradiction, since the efficiency of converting forage into meat is higher in   hogs than cattle. The explanation is found in the existence of vast extensions   of natural grasses in Colombia just as in Argentina, which can be used for   extensive cattle production without large investments.... Ample land resources and   the availability of labor give a decisive advantage to cattle raising at the   cost of hog farming.</p>       <p>                 Likewise, Lowell Jarvis (1986, p. 10) stated   that in Latin America the &quot;abundant supply [of cattle] from low-cost pastoral   resources has led to a tradition of high beef consumption by all levels of the   population&quot;. Cheap grass, principally from natural grasslands, enabled Latin   American cattle to out-compete hogs.</p>       ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p>                   In Colombia, however, this   argument runs into some problems. Here, cheap savanna land has been less   critical to the national cattle industry than perhaps elsewhere in Latin   America. Colombia's quintessential grasslands, the Llanos Orientales, were not   that significant nationally until well into the twentieth century (Garc&iacute;a, 2003;   Rausch, 1993). The centerof Colombian ranching for the last century or so has   been the Caribbean coast and Antioquia. Here, the predominate forage has not   been from natural savannas but from &quot;artificial&quot; or planted pastures. While   cattle mainly grazed on natural grasslands up to the mid-nineteenth century,   since then the big expansion of ranching has largely come at the expense of the   country's lowland forests. This transformation of forest into pasture, however,   was often difficult, risky and expensive: grass was not cheap for the taking   (Van Ausdal, MS).</p>       <p>                     But despite the cost and effort of developing   pastures, grass was still cheaper than corn, which was often used to fatten   hogs. Much of the price premium for pork can be traced back to the high cost of   feed. Throughout the twentieth century, industry observers repeated the refrain:   &quot;[W]ithout cheap feed is it impossible to get cheap lard [and pork]&quot; (G&oacute;mez   Rueda, 1936, p. 499; see also G&oacute;mez Cu&eacute;llar, 1909, pp. 196, 200, 202, 203;   Ospina, 1940, p. 100; Littman, 1965, p. 7; CIAT, 1972, pp. 9394; Le&oacute;n etal.,   1975, p. 18).<sup><a href="#14">14</a></sup></p>       <p>                       Trying to pinpoint   the cost differences between producing grass and corn, or cattle and hogs, is   not straightforward, however. Data, especially before 1950, is difficult to   find, scattered geographically and temporally, and is not always easily   comparable. One way to try to address the comparability problem is to calculate   production costs in terms of the labor required to fatten hogs and cattle. Based   on data from Antioquia in the 1950s, I calculate that it took roughly six or   seven days of labor to produce the corn necessary to fatten one hog.<sup><a href="#15">15</a></sup> By contrast, in the Bajo Cauca in the early   1920s, it took only four days of labor to fatten a steer.<sup><a href="#16">16</a></sup> Obviously, this comparison does not tell the full story,   but it does suggest that one of the problems faced by the Colombian hog industry   was the amount of labor required to produce feed. One of the main advantages of   raising cattle rather than hogs was that the substantial initial cost of buying   or developing pasture land could be amortized over a relatively long period of   time; by contrast, the land preparation and weeding costs needed to grow corn   were a constant and heavy burden. A quick comparison with the United States   provides some perspective on the amount of effort that went into farming corn in   Colombia. There was some difference in the yield per hectare: in the U.S., up to   1940, the average was 1,600 kilograms; in Antioquia, in 1955, the estimate was   1,500 kilograms (U.S. Dept. of Commerce, 1975, Series K 445-485; Caja de Cr&eacute;dito   Agrario Industrial y Minero, 1955, p. 15). But a key part of the difference was   the amount of time required to produce that hectare of corn. In the U.S., the   average number of labor-hours it took a farmer to produce 1,600 kilograms of   corn had dropped from 163 in the mid-nineteenth century to 64 in 1940 (U.S.   Dept. of Commerce, 1975, Series K 445485). By contrast, it still took Antioque&ntilde;o   farmers over 400 hours to produce the same amount of grain in the 1950s (Caja de   Cr&eacute;dito Agrario Industrial y Minero, 1955, p. 15; see alsoCurrie, 1966, p. 174;   C&eacute;spedes, 1979; Posada, 1952, p. 101).</p>       <p>                         The substantial labor   required to grow corn, sometimes for only mediocre yields, made it   expensive.<sup><a href="#17">17</a></sup> M. T. Dawe (1915, p. 525), British   agricultural advisor to the Colombian government in the late 1910s, was shocked   by the high price of corn, which sold for four times what it did in east and   southern Africa.<sup><a href="#18">18</a></sup> Fifty years later, Littman   (1965, p. 1) reiterated that &quot;[t]he ratio between the price of hogs and grains   (corn, barley) or root crops (potatoes) was unfavorable to the development of   intensive pork production in Colombia.&quot; The high cost of corn, therefore, stood   in the way of greater pork consumption. More than just the availability of   cheap, natural grasslands, much of the comparative advantage of beef lay   in the low productivity of the country's agriculture.<sup><a href="#19">19</a></sup></p>       <p>                           But why did the cost of corn make pork   more expensive than beef? After all, hogs can grow and fatten on other types of   feed besides corn and other costly crops. They do well, for example, on waste   products from the farm and kitchen, and can forage for themselves. Around 1940,   Kathryn Wylie (1942, p. 127) noted that farmers &quot;allowed [their hogs] to root   for themselves&quot; and fed them little corn (see also Havens, 1965, pp. 130-131).   Even into the 1980s, most hogs in Colombia were raised by peasants or   small-scale farmers who relied principally on feed with limited or no market   value (Restrepo, 1988). It is not obvious, therefore, that the price of grain   would be so critical to the hog industry.</p>       <p>                             Nonetheless, numerous   contemporary observers and later historians have remarked on the importance of   corn as hog feed, especially for fattening. A corn-hog complex characterized a   good deal of Antioque&ntilde;o colonization, for example: colonos relied on hogs to   increase the value of frontier corn surpluses and move them to market (Parsons,   1968, pp. 73, 7879, 89; Brew, 2000, pp. 190192; Poveda, 1979, pp. 110111; see   also Restrepo, 1988; COINCO, 1988). Tulio Ospina (1913, p. 238) claimed that in   Antioquia &quot;corn is the principal feed during the fattening stage.&quot; In the   late-nineteenth century, Camacho Rold&aacute;n (1946, pp. 183, 195) estimated that   about half of the hogs slaughtered in Colombia (some 300,000 to 400,000) were   fattened on corn, &quot;each one of which consumes between two and four hundred   pounds of grain&quot;<sup><a href="#20">20</a></sup>. According to the manager of a   large hog farm near Bogot&aacute; at the beginning of the twentieth century, corn or   other grains and tubers (barley, fava beans, potatoes, etc.) were too expensive   to be used at any other stage except fattening (G&oacute;mez Cu&eacute;llar, 1909, p. 196).   The 300 to 400 percent difference between the price of thin and fat hogs   likely rested on the low opportunity-costs of breeding pigs and the   importance of corn to fatten them.<sup><a href="#21">21</a></sup> Wylie,   therefore, was probably correct to state that, overall, hogs ate little corn.   Farmers generally allowed their hogs to roam freely, feeding on pasture grasses   and in fallow fields or forests until the age of 10 to 12 months. Afterwards,   however, enough hogs did fatten on corn (and other agricultural products) for it   to become an important determinant in the price of pork and   lard.</p>       <p>                               Moving hogs to market likely reinforced the use of corn to   fatten them for slaughter. If they walk much without being fed, hogs will burn   off their stores of fat and profit. This circumscribed the geographic area in   which they could be profitably fattened for a particular market.<sup><a href="#22">22</a></sup> Hogs from outside this area had to be fattened locally.   The wide &quot;hog-shed&quot; of larger markets thus helped sustain the inter-regional   movement of animals and the numbers that had to be fattened on corn or similar   products. When frontier lands were relatively close to major markets, hogs were   a convenient way to transform surplus corn (or other crop) into a mobile and   marketable product. Once the distance became too great, however, raising fat   hogs ceased to be profitable (COINCO, 1988). Similarly, extensive hog raising   where land was cheap, whether by foraging, scavenging, or feeding on pasture   grasses and legumes, was mostly limited to thin animals. Fat hogs needed a   relatively easy way to get to market or had to be slaughtered locally. This is   why hog farmers in the Sin&uacute; Valley -the largest hog-producing region in the   1930s- slaughtered the bulk of their own animals. It was more profitable to sell   tins of lard to the interior of the country, even though this undercut the price   of pork locally, than send live hogs.</p>       <p>                                 Additionally, the high cost   of corn (and other feed) also helped raise the price of pork by limiting the   overall pig population. Because grains were expensive, hogs were principally a   backyard activity that turned waste products into cash and took advantage of   female and child labor. Since each peasant household could only generate so much   waste, this limited the number of hogs they could profitably raise. As a result,   cattle far outnumbered hogs.</p>       <p>                                   In 1960, there was only one pig in   Colombia for every five head of cattle (DANE, 1964, pp. 5354). A team of   livestock experts from the United Nations (1962, p. 5) found that there was good   demand for pork in the 1950s, but that its &quot;consumption [was] severely   restricted by supply difficulties and high prices&quot;. Small hog populations likely   helped boost prices.</p>       <p>                                     Four other factors further limited hog   supplies and sustained prices. First, the settlement of the agrarian frontier   and the spread of pasturelands eventually undercut hog raising. Corn yields   tended to be high in lands recently cleared of old-growth forest, and hogs were   a convenient way to transport surpluses to market. Areas of colonization,   therefore, were often important hog producers. The bonanza years were   short-lived, however. And as falling corn yields pushed the corn-hog complex   increasingly further from markets, it became harder to profitably use hogs to   turn surpluses into mobile commodities (Parsons, 1968, p. 89). Furthermore, the   introduction of African pasture grasses in the mid-nineteenth century helped   changed the dynamics of pasture formation. These quick- growing and   livestock-resistant grasses -par&aacute; (Brachiaria mutica) and guinea (Panicum   maximum)- helped prevent forest re-growth in recently cleared areas by rapidly   forming a dense mat-like ground cover (Rivas, 1983, p. 36; Van Ausdal, MS; also   see Parsons, 1972). They encouraged ranchers to develop new pastures out of the   forest and farmers to plant grass in fallow fields. As a result, the once   forested landscape -or patchwork of forest, fallow, and field- became   increasingly dominated by grass. The development of new pastures initially   stimulated corn production, which was used to loosen the soil before planting   grass and help cover expenses. In the long run, however, the spread of permanent   pastures stimulated cattle ranching at the expense of hogs. There is some   scattered evidence to suggest that Colombians, at least in some regions,   consumed more pork when there was more forest and less grass. In the mid -to   late- nineteenth century, pork consumption rates appear to have been higher in   parts of Old Bol&iacute;var than they would be in the twentieth century.<sup><a href="#23">23</a></sup> Pedro Nel Ospina could not find a market for his cattle   in Ituango (Antioquia) in the early-twentieth century because the peasants of   this frontier zone raised too many pigs (APNOyC, 200, p. 452). Pork consumption,   though never very strong, may have slowly tapered off as colonos and   cattle ranchers cleared the forests and planted grass (see <a href="#f1">Figure 1</a>).</p>       ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p>                                       Second, the lack of elite interest in raising hogs limited   their numbers. This reluctance may have stemmed from a degree of &quot;repugnance&quot;   for the activity (G&oacute;mez Cu&eacute;llar, 1909, p. 193). But there were some practical   reasons as well. For example, there were greater economies of scale in raising   cattle than extensively-raised hogs (Poveda, 1979, p. 110; see also Van Ausdal,   forthcoming). Many also thought that intensive hog raising was not worth the   effort. Most dairy farmers on the Sabana de Bogot&aacute; preferred to throw or give   away their leftover whey from cheese-making rather than use it to raise pigs   (G&oacute;mez Cu&eacute;llar, 1909, p. 193). For hacendados without a ready supply of waste   products that they could use for feed, raising hogs would require them to become   farmers. Although the landed elite thought of themselves as agricultores,   farming was something that, outside of a few products, many were unwilling to   do: the risks of climate, pests, and overproduction were too great (Camacho   Rold&aacute;n, 1976, p. 125; Brew, 2000, pp. 210212; Reinhardt, 1988; Van Ausdal, MS).   Also, there were few economies of scale in farming staples until the spread of   mechanization in the 1950s.<sup><a href="#24">24</a></sup> As a result, the   landed elite generally left hog raising to peasants, a division of labor that   the 1960 agriculture and livestock census clearly shows (see <a href="#f4">Figure 4</a>).</p>       <p>                                         A third factor that limited hog raising was the difficulty of   generating low-cost feed from the waste of food processing industries. Colombian   hog boosters encouraged entrepreneurs to take advantage of cheap by-products   such as skim milk and whey from dairies, bran from millers, mash from breweries,   oil seed cakes from vegetable oil mills, and slaughterhouse waste (G&oacute;mez   Cu&eacute;llar, 1909; Medina, 1936, p. 444; Bernal, 1937; Ospina, 1940). While there   were some steps in this direction, even into the second half of the twentieth   century little progress had been made (Le&oacute;n et al., 1975; Restrepo, 1988). One   reason was the late urbanization of the country. Small urban markets, and low   purchasing power more generally, limited the amount of available by-products.   The geographic dispersion of waste material further limited the economies of   scale that could have turned them into low-cost sources of feed. For example,   without a system of cold chains with which to centralize slaughtering, every municipality had its own slaughterhouse. Even in the second half of   the twentieth century, many of these were too small to warrant processing their   waste (United Nations, 1962, pp. 26-27). Even where there was a high degree of   concentration, such as the vegetable oil industry in Barranquilla, high   transportation costs discouraged the use of cottonseed cake as hog   feed.</p>       <p>                                           Finally, while traditional methods of 'extensive' hog   rearing did not limit their numbers, they did limit the amount of meat that   existing stocks produced. Even in the second half of the twentieth century, most   Colombian hogs were hardy, self -reliant, disease- resistant creole breeds that   had adapted well to local environments. But compared to improved breeds, they   grew and reproduced slowly, and yielded less meat and fat (Le&oacute;n et al., 1975, p.   16; Pe&ntilde;arete, 1958, p. 216; Ospina, 1913, p. 237). Furthermore, many hogs raised   in this fashion received inadequate diets, which slowed their growth even more,   lowered the speed at which they reproduced, and increased their mortality rates   (Littman, 1965, 3; Le&oacute;n et al., 1975, pp. 10, 32; CIAT, 1972, 9293; Bernal,   1937, p. 936; G&oacute;mez Rueda, 1936, p. 554). Before 1950, boosters claimed that it   was possible to raise hogs in six to ten months and fatten them in two (Bernal,   1937, p. 925; Ospina, 1940, pp. 40-41). Most Colombian hogs, however, were not   raised under 'ideal' conditions. Even in the early 1970s, it could take 15 to 18   months before they were ready for slaughter (CIAT, 1972, p. 92; Le&oacute;n et al.,   1975, p. 10; see also Ospina, 1913, p. 237; Bernal, 1937, p. 936; Pe&ntilde;arete,   1958, p. 216). Slaughtering hogs at this late age meant that they did not   produce meat much more efficiently than cattle.<sup><a href="#25">25</a></sup></p>       <p><b>The politics of pork</b></p>       <p>                                             In the   previous section, I argue that the high price of pork relative to beef limited   its consumption. Pork was expensive because of the high cost of corn, used to   fatten hogs, as well as a small pig population. These immediate causes, in turn,   were rooted in the low productivity of Colombian agriculture, a small national   market, the slow process of industrialization, elite disinterest, and the   advantages of pasture and cattle. But just how 'natural' was the comparative   advantage of beef? Was it primarily an economic issue? Or did politics, power,   and policy decisions also have an impact? In this section, I look at the   politics behind meat consumption in two different ways.<sup><a href="#26">26</a></sup> First, I examine how the political power of ranchers and   their monopolization of much of the country's land negatively influenced hog   raising. Second, I explore how the politics of lard imports helped to undermine   pork consumption.</p>       <p>                                               Two salient characteristics of the Colombian   countryside have long been the inequitable land tenure structure and the vast   majority of 'agricultural' land dedicated to raising cattle. Could the   monopolization of land by ranchers be responsible for the country's beef-heavy   diet? There are two ways this monopolization might have influenced meat   consumption patterns. On the one hand, ranchers may have boosted the   competitiveness of beef by raising cattle on the best agricultural land in the   country. In so doing, they benefited from better pastures and more productive   cattle operations. But more importantly, their control of the flat, fertile   valley floors forced peasant agriculture onto more marginal hillsides, lowering   its productivity and raising food (and feed) prices. This 'irrational'   distribution of agricultural and pasture lands may have helped give beef an edge   over pork (IBRD, 1956, p. 54; Currie, 1950). On the other hand, it is possible   that the general monopolization of land also contributed to the competitiveness   of cattle. One consequence of this monopolization was a land-hungry peasantry   that was willing to clear forests and plant pasture in exchange for temporary   access to land. In such arrangements, ranchers provided peasants with patches of   forested land to farm for a few years so long as they returned it under   grass.<sup><a href="#27">27</a></sup> These land-for-pasture exchanges aided the   expansion of ranching and ultimately may have had some effect on the price of   beef. Another consequence of this monopolization was to push peasants out to the   agrarian frontier where they would undertake the hard labor of settling the   forest. Ranchers later followed them to consolidate the lands that they had   cleared (Fals Borda, 1976, 2002, pp. 162164; Negrete and Garabito, 1985; Reyes,   1978). Beef might have also benefited from the labor of these peasant colonizers   through cheap land sales and the usurpation of developed plots. Lastly,   the unequal land tenure structure squeezed the peasantry onto a small land base.   Since peasants raised the bulk of the hogs in the country, the reduced size of   their farms limited the number that each family was capable of raising and,   therefore, the overall pig population.</p>       <p>                                                 Although it is likely that   the inequitable distribution of land in Colombia negatively influenced hog   raising, we should be careful not to overstate its impact. Any substantial   expansion of hog raising would likely have depended on obtaining a cheap source   of feed. Even though the peasantry might have been able to raise more hogs if   they had greater access to land, there still remained the problem of fattening   them for market. While they could have also grown more corn, without some way to   substantially increase the productivity of their labor, hog and pork prices   would have remained high. Additionally, without high-protein feed supplements,   peasant hogs were not much more efficient than cattle at producing meat. And   although a good number of ranchers profited from land-for-pasture exchanges or   by cheaply 'buying' peasant clearings, the cattle industry did not depend on   such practices (Van Ausdal, MS). There are limits to how much land usurpation   subsidized the price of beef.</p>       <p>                                                   The second kind of political   influence I want to address revolves around the question of trade and the place   of lard in the Colombian diet. In 1944, the newspaper, Diario de la Costa,   blamed the 'demise' of the coastal hog-raising industry on the 1936 trade treaty   between Colombia and the United States: a 50 percent drop in the tariff on lard,   it argued, unleashed a wave of U.S. imports that drove peasant hog producers out   of business.<sup><a href="#28">28</a></sup> Up to the mid- twentieth century,   lard (along with tallow) was the most important source of cooking fat in   Colombia and a key part of the hog industry.<sup><a href="#29">29</a></sup> Did   freer trade in lard undermine Colombian hog raising and, by consequence, pork   consumption?</p>       <p>                                                     Lard imports did not begin in 1936. Camacho Rold&aacute;n   (1946, p. 130) suggested that they started sometime in the mid-nineteenth   century, causing the price of lard in Bogot&aacute; to fall from $20 pesos per arroba   (25 metric pounds) to $1. By 1909, if not earlier, Colombia imported roughly   half the lard it consumed from the United States (G&oacute;mez Cu&eacute;llar, 1909, p. 4;   Bell, 1921). A sharp reduction of lard imports during WWI stimulated the   domestic industry.</p>       <p>                                                       Yet local supplies could not keep pace with   growing demand, and by the end of the 1920s Colombia was again importing about   half of the lard it consumed.<sup><a href="#30">30</a></sup> In an effort to   reduce its dependence on U.S. lard, the government raised the import duty on   lard by 500 percent in 1931. This measure considerably slowed imports but did   not stop them. The following year, therefore, the government promulgated a   sanitary regulation that effectively put an end to the trade.<sup><a href="#31">31</a></sup> Lard was an important component of the 1936 trade treaty   between the U.S. and Colombia. However, while the treaty reduced the tariff by   50 percent, it did not address the sanitary restrictions. U.S. lard remained   blocked from the Colombian market except when cooking-oil shortages during WWII   prompted the government to temporarily lift the restriction.<sup><a href="#32">32</a></sup> The 1936 trade treaty, therefore, did not undermine   Colombian hog producers. Nonetheless, the much longer history of lard imports   prior to 1930 probably did discourage production by keeping a lid on prices   (Camacho Rold&aacute;n, 1973, p. 197; Restrepo Plata, 1912, p. 400; D&iacute;az, 1996, p.   329). (Though whether or not the country could have afforded much higher lard   prices, without drastically reducing its consumption, is another   question.)</p>       ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p>                                                         Ironically, the protectionism of the early-1930s   eventually helped undermine hog raising and pork consumption. Despite the   government's interest in reducing lard imports, it is doubtful that peasant   hog-farmers could have effectively lobbied the government for protective trade   policies. In fact, the government designed the measures to protect the nascent   vegetable oil industry. By limiting lard imports, and reducing the duty on   copra, the primary raw material in vegetable shortening, officials helped   domestic manufacturers lower their production costs and grab a larger market   share. Hog producers initially benefited from the measures. In the long run,   however, they lost out as vegetable shortening (and eventually oil) displaced   lard as the preeminent cooking fat.<sup><a href="#33">33</a></sup></p>       <p><b>                                                         Conclusion</b></p>       <p>                                                           So why have Colombians   historically eaten so much more beef than pork? The principal reason, I argue,   is that pork has long been more expensive than beef; and that this price   difference is rooted in the low productivity of Colombian agriculture. But the   road to understanding consumption patterns is rarely straight and short. In this   case, a variety of factors, in addition to price, converged to make beef -until   recently- the king of meats in Colombia: the development of a taste for and   tradition of beef; the culinary influence of other staples; a receding agrarian   frontier; the lack of elite interest in hog raising; land tenure   patterns; the difficulty of developing by- product industries; a long history of   cheap imports; the &quot;modernization&quot; of cooking fats. Although consumption studies   have recently begun to emphasize the ideological and contested nature of food   and diet, my focus here has been largely material: on what has influenced price   and supply rather than the cultural politics of demand. Food is not just a   matter of sustenance; a range of symbolic, cultural and political factors shape   what and how we eat. Nonetheless, in the case of meat consumption in Colombia,   the high cost of (corn and) pork did much to secure the long-held predominance   of beef.</p>     <p>    <center><a name="f1"><img src="img/revistas/res/n29/29a06f1.jpg"></a></center></p>     <p>    <center><a name="f2"><img src="img/revistas/res/n29/29a06f2.jpg"></a></center></p>     <p>    <center><a name="f3"><img src="img/revistas/res/n29/29a06f3.jpg"></a></center></p>     <p>    ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<center><a name="f4"><img src="img/revistas/res/n29/29a06f4.jpg"></a></center></p>     <p>    <center><a name="f5"><img src="img/revistas/res/n29/29a06f5.jpg"></a></center></p> <hr size="1">     <p><b>Comentarios</b></p>     <p><a name="1">1</a> The culprit, of course, was chicken. For the fascinating yet dis-turbing story   of the rise of modern chicken production, see Molina (2002), Boyd and Watts   (1997), and Striffler (2005).</p>     <p> <a name="2">2</a> Tropaeoleum tuberosum.</p>     <p> <a name="3">3</a> AHC, Gobernaci&oacute;n, Justicia (1905-1933), Folder 25, &quot;...Marcial   Gonz&aacute;lez... y Juan Grice han celebrado el siguiente contrato: 1905-6&quot;.</p>     <p> <a name="4">4</a> Mart&iacute;nez, 1990, pp. 91-92; AGN, Rep&uacute;blica, Carnicer&iacute;as   Oficiales (Volume I), pp. 23-24, 27.</p>     <p> <a name="5">5</a> For mid-twentieth-century   consumption statistics, see G&oacute;mez Dur&aacute;n (1939); Parsons (1968, p. 119); Garc&iacute;a   (1978, pp. 266- 289); Arg&uuml;elles (1949); Bejarano (1941, pp. 133-135); Mu&ntilde;oz and   Hurtado (1950); Direcci&oacute;n Nacional de Estad&iacute;stica (1948); AOFB,   Ceret&eacute;-Sindicato-Liga de Trabajadores, &quot;Sistemas de alimentaci&oacute;n en la regi&oacute;n de   Sabanas&quot;. </p>     <p><a name="6">6</a> It is possible that meat served as an incentive to   attract rural laborers, especially where they were scarce.</p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p> <a name="7">7</a> For example, see NARA, Record Group (RG) 166 (1942-1945),   Colombia, Box 178, Anne Sundelin Floyd, &quot;Summary of current meat price   controversy, Bogot&aacute;, Colombia,&quot; May 23, 1945.</p>     <p> <a name="8">8</a> In the early 1820s, Hamilton (1993, p. 317) also noted that   the Medical Board of Buga, in the Cauca Valley, limited the amount of fish that   could be sold in the city in order to prevent a reduction in beef and mutton   consumption.</p>     <p><a name="9">9</a> In the colonial era, pork was also considered to   be good for one's health (Saldarriaga, 2006).</p>     <p> <a name="10">10</a> The paucity of immigration into Colombia is one possible   reason for the limits of change: without the introduction of new tastes,   ingredients and methods of food preparation, cooks tend to stick with what they   know.</p>     <p> <a name="11">11</a> Vargas gave prices for a large hog in 1739 and 1791. The   cost difference assumes that his large hog yielded 100 pounds of meat and fat.   In the mid-twentieth century, the average yield in meat, fat, and bone was   estimated to be 76.5 pounds (D&aacute;vila, 1948, p. 54).</p>     <p> <a name="12">12</a> NARA, RG 84, Consulate Records, Colombia, Cartagena   (Securi-ty Segregated, 1943), Box 14, &quot;Economic Survey of the Cartagena,   Colombia Consular District,&quot; R. Kenneth Oakley, Nov. 10, 1943.</p>     <p> <a name="13">13</a> It should be noted, however, that the price differential in   Bar-ranquilla at this time was not as large as in other parts of the country. It   is likely that, once it surpassed a certain price, it was no longer worth buying   pork.</p>     <p> <a name="14">14 </a>In the early 1970s, a development project found that penned   hogs, fed improved diets, gained weight three times faster and with three times   less feed, than &quot;traditionally&quot; raised animals. But because of the high cost of   'improved' feed, even with such productivity gains, profit margins remained   razor thin while the degree of risk greatly increased. Needless to say, the   targeted peasants did not adopt most of the project's recommendations (CIAT,   1972).</p>     <p> <a name="15">15</a> The Caja de Cr&eacute;dito Agrario, Industrial y Minero (1955)   estimated that it cost $383 to produce and market one hectare of corn in   Antioquia. This was equivalent to over 100 days of labor in terms of prevailing   wages. The average yield from this hect are was 1,500 kilograms of corn. If we   consider only the actual labor costs of land preparation, planting, and weeding   -and ignore land, harvesting, processing, marketing, and administrative costs-   it took about 44 days to grow one hectare of corn. One day&#39;s labor, therefore,   produced about 34 kilograms of corn. His-torical observers suggest that it took   between 200 and 250 kilos of corn, and two months, to fatten a hog, doubling its   weight from roughly 50 to 100 kilograms (Ospina, 1940; Bernal, 1937).</p>     <p> <a name="16">16 </a>Based on the 1922 estimate that it cost between $1,000 and   $1,200 per month to maintain 2,000 hectares of artificial pastures in the Bajo   Cauca, including fence repair, animal care, and salt. Wages were between 50&cent; to   60&cent; per day, and the pastures had a stocking rate of two head per hectare   (APNOyC, Correspondencia 1917-1936, Feb. 1, 1922).</p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p> <a name="17">17</a> Added to this were production difficulties, storage losses,   and high marketing costs (Dawe, 1915; Guerra, 1966; Ruiz de Lon-do&ntilde;o and   Pinstrup-Anderson, 1975).</p>     <p> <a name="18">18 </a>In the late-nineteenth century,   the price of corn appears to have been about twice that in the U.S. (Camacho   Rold&aacute;n, 1976, p. 117; see also Lagoeyte, 1918, p. 377). Around 1960, according   to Currie (1966, p. 173), the difference had risen to 180 percent.</p>     <p> <a name="19">19</a> By low productivity I mean that crop yields were not very   large in terms of inputs of land, labor, and capital. In turn, this helped make   agricultural products expensive. Limited capital inputs (e.g., fertilizer),   partly the result of an historic urban bias in agri cultural policy, were one   cause of low yields per unit of land and labor. (My thanks to one of the   anonymous reviewers for high-lighting this point.) Colombian agriculture faced   additional chal-lenges as well. For instance, the rugged topography of much of   the country's farmland made mechanization difficult. The highcost of inputs also   undercut a good deal of the increased productivity gains of mechanized   agriculture (see C&eacute;spedes, 1979, Tabla 15).</p>     <p> <a name="20">20</a> Alejandro L&oacute;pez (1915, p. 28) stated that in Antioquia,   100,000 hogs were fattened on about 200 kilograms of corn each. See also   Monsalve (1929, p.148), who noted the maxim, &quot;purchased corn does not fatten&quot;;   Ospina, 1940; Bernal, 1937.</p>     <p> <a name="21">21 </a>Guerrero, 1881; APNOyC, Hojas   Sueltas, Feria de Ganado de Medell&iacute;n el 8 de agosto de 1934; NARA, RG 166,   1946-1949, Colombia, Box 623, &quot;Annual Livestock and Meat Report,&quot; March 11,   1949.</p>     <p> <a name="22">22</a> Walsh (1977, p. 707) thought that the proliferation of small   pork-packing operations meant that most farmers in the U.S. Midwest during the   early -and mid- nineteenth century did not send their hogs great distances to be   slaughtered. For longer trips they tended to take advantage of canals and later   railroads. See also Cronon (1991, pp. 225-227).</p>     <p> <a name="23">23</a> Gaceta de Bol&iacute;var, no. 443, Sept. 9, 1866, p. 3; Gaceta de   Bol&iacute;var, no. 454, Nov. 4, 1866, pp.1-2; Gaceta de Bol&iacute;var, no. 551, March 29,   1868, p. 7; Gaceta de Bol&iacute;var, no. 646, Oct. 3, 1869; Gaceta de Bol&iacute;var, no.   702, July 31, 1870, pp. 299-303. Old Bol&iacute;var in-cludes the contemporary   departments of Bol&iacute;var, Atl&aacute;ntico, Sucre, and C&oacute;rdoba.</p>     <p> <a name="24">24</a> The landed elite, therefore, tended to concentrate on   products for which the markets were stronger (exports) or where they did not   compete to the same degree with peasant production (cattle, sugarcane, wheat),   and on sharecropping or other forms of land rental.</p>     <p> <a name="25">25</a> In the 1950s, the yield of pork per head of stock in the   national herd was not much higher than beef: 34.2 kilograms versus 30.5 for   cattle (United Nations, 1962, p. 20).</p>     <p> <a name="26">26 </a>For reasons of space, I do not   address how the government sup- ported the cattle industry -through research and   extension work, subsidies, credit, and other programs- but did little to assist   hog farmers. While such policies helped ranching expand geographi-cally, they   also contributed to the slow improvement of ranching productivity. While there   are also some indications that the productivity of hog raising improved over the   twentieth century, such gains probably lagged behind those of the cattle   industry. This could be another way that beef maintained its competitive edge   over pork.</p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p> <a name="27">27</a> Fals Borda, 1976; 2002, p. 124B; NARA, RG 166, 1942-45,   Colombia, Box 178, &quot;Cattle raising and related industries in the Department of   Bol&iacute;var, Colombia,&quot; R. Kenneth Oakley, July 31, 1944.</p>     <p> <a name="28">28</a> NARA, RG 84, Consulate Records, Colombia, Cartagena   (General, 1943-48), Box 11, &quot;Resolutions re: Hog lard,&quot; 1944.</p>     <p> <a name="29">29 </a>NARA, RG 166, 1942-45, Colombia, Box 175, &quot;Lard and   Vegetable Lard - Colombia,&quot; John A. Hopkins, Dec. 6, 1944.</p>     <p> <a name="30">30 </a>NARA, RG 166, 1946-49, Colombia, Box 625, &quot;Semi-Annual Fats   and Oils Report,&quot; Kenneth Wernimont and Jon G. Fossett, Nov. 12, 1948.</p>     <p> <a name="31">31 </a>Ibid.</p>     <p> <a name="32">32</a> NARA, RG 166, 1942-45, Colombia,   Box 177, &quot;Colombian Dis-crimination Against Hog Lard,&quot; March 3, 1945; NARA, RG   84, Consulate Records, Colombia, Cartagena (Security Segregated, 1943), Box 14,   &quot;Economic Survey of the Cartagena, Colombia Consular District,&quot; R. Kenneth   Oakley, Nov. 10, 1943.</p>     <p> <a name="33">33</a> By 1960, lard comprised only about   15 percent of the national fat and oil market, down from around 75 percent   during the early-1940s: see Ministerio de Agricultura (1968, p. 4); NARA, RG   166, 1942-45, Colombia, Box 175, &quot;Oilcrops and Vegetable Lard - Colombia,&quot; May   3, 1945; NARA, RG 166, 1942-45, Colombia, Box 175, &quot;Lard and Vegetable Lard -   Colombia,&quot; John A. Hopkins, Dec. 6, 1945</p> <hr size="1">     <p><b>Archives</b></p>     <!-- ref --><p>   1. Archivo Pedro Nel Ospina y Compa&ntilde;&iacute;a (Fundaci&oacute;n   Antioque&ntilde;a de Estudios Sociales or FAES, Medell&iacute;n) -APNOyC &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;[&#160;<a href="javascript:void(0);" onclick="javascript: window.open('/scielo.php?script=sci_nlinks&ref=000111&pid=S0123-885X200800010000600001&lng=','','width=640,height=500,resizable=yes,scrollbars=1,menubar=yes,');">Links</a>&#160;]<!-- end-ref --><!-- ref --><p>2. Archivo Orlando Fals Borda (Banco de la Rep&uacute;blica library,   Monter&iacute;a)-AOFB&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;[&#160;<a href="javascript:void(0);" onclick="javascript: window.open('/scielo.php?script=sci_nlinks&ref=000112&pid=S0123-885X200800010000600002&lng=','','width=640,height=500,resizable=yes,scrollbars=1,menubar=yes,');">Links</a>&#160;]<!-- end-ref --><!-- ref --><p>3. Archivo Hist&oacute;rico de Cartagena - AHC&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;[&#160;<a href="javascript:void(0);" onclick="javascript: window.open('/scielo.php?script=sci_nlinks&ref=000113&pid=S0123-885X200800010000600003&lng=','','width=640,height=500,resizable=yes,scrollbars=1,menubar=yes,');">Links</a>&#160;]<!-- end-ref --><!-- ref --><p>4. Archivo General de la Naci&oacute;n (Bogot&aacute;) - AGN&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;[&#160;<a href="javascript:void(0);" onclick="javascript: window.open('/scielo.php?script=sci_nlinks&ref=000114&pid=S0123-885X200800010000600004&lng=','','width=640,height=500,resizable=yes,scrollbars=1,menubar=yes,');">Links</a>&#160;]<!-- end-ref --><!-- ref --><p>5. National Archives and Record Administration (Washington, D.C.) -   NARASource: DANE (1964).&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;[&#160;<a href="javascript:void(0);" onclick="javascript: window.open('/scielo.php?script=sci_nlinks&ref=000115&pid=S0123-885X200800010000600005&lng=','','width=640,height=500,resizable=yes,scrollbars=1,menubar=yes,');">Links</a>&#160;]<!-- end-ref --><p><b>References</b></p>      <!-- ref --><p>1. Arboleda C., H. (1905). Estad&iacute;stica General de la Rep&uacute;blica   de Colombia. Bogot&aacute;: Imprenta Nacional.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;[&#160;<a href="javascript:void(0);" onclick="javascript: window.open('/scielo.php?script=sci_nlinks&ref=000117&pid=S0123-885X200800010000600006&lng=','','width=640,height=500,resizable=yes,scrollbars=1,menubar=yes,');">Links</a>&#160;]<!-- end-ref --><!-- ref --><p>2. Arg&uuml;elles Vargas, F. (1952). La Alimentaci&oacute;n de la Clase Obrera en   Barranquilla. 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