July 24, 2012
Vietnam poultry breeders may lower output on reduced prices
Vietnam's poultry breeders may lower or stop production if chicken prices continue to drop, as many were hit hard by the price decline.
Without timely measures, there will be a shortage of chicken in the domestic market in the coming months, according to Nguyen Dang Vang, chairman of the Vietnam Animal Breeding Association.
The price of industrially-raised chicken has dropped many times in the first half of the year, reports VNS.
Currently, chicken prices at farms is only VND19,000 (US$0.91) per kilogramme.
Nguyen Thanh Phuong from Emivest Viet Nam said production costs for a kilogramme of chicken had risen to more than VND30,000 (US$1.44). At current prices, the company has lost about VND11,000 (US$0.53) per kilogramme of sold chicken. Phuong said a reduction in purchasing power was the main factor behind the chicken-price drop.
If the situation does not improve in the next few weeks, the company might cut back on its breeding activities.
Many chicken farms in Dong Nai, Binh Duong and Ba Ria-Vung Tau provinces have already scaled down their breeding or suspended breeding activities. Some have begun to breed chicken for foreign companies.
According to the Binh Phuoc Chicken Breeding Association, about 50% of chicken farms in the province, mostly household-size farms, have stopped breeding and want to sell their farms.
Pham Thi Tam, owner of an egg-laying hen farm in Dong Nai Province, said she had to reduce her hen herd by 40% since she incurred a loss of VND200 (US$31.31) for each sold egg.
To remedy the situation, the Vietnam Animal Breeding Association has asked the Government to subsidise animal-feed prices, slash corporate income taxes, cut import tariffs on animal-feed materials, and offer preferential loans.
The association has also asked relevant agencies to develop measures to prevent smuggling of poultry from China in an effort to prevent prices from falling.
In addition, Nguyen Quoc Trung, general director of Japfa Vietnam, said retail prices of chicken remained high despite a significant drop in prices at farms.
He said authorities should improve price management in the retail sector and outline measures to cut middlemen in the distribution of chicken. This would help chicken prices to become more reasonable and would stimulate consumption.










