ghazi52
THINK TANK: CONSULTANT
- Thread starter
- #31
Mutton remains trapped in an archaic, overregulated, underdeveloped mess. Instead of enabling commercial-scale fattening farms, disease monitoring, and proper slaughter standards, the government clings to DC rate controls, arbitrary bans, and decades of neglect, all while pretending the problem is solved through endless meetings and overlapping committees.
Instead, we have a stagnant, short-termist system where small producers chase quick profits, elite consumers demand artificially low prices, and everyone else gets left with the scraps of an industry that should be one of Pakistan’s crown jewels. Because if Pakistan has any true natural comparative advantage, it’s not textiles, wheat, sugar, or rice. It’s mutton.
Few countries possess the climate, terrain, and animal stock to dominate in small ruminant meat production. And with the right reforms, Pakistan could build a globally recognized mutton brand, exporting value-added products and cuisine alongside live animals and carcasses.
And here’s the kicker: banning live animal exports while allowing minimal-value frozen carcass exports makes little economic sense. Both drain domestic supply. Both compete with local demand. And if live exports raised domestic prices, wouldn’t that be exactly the market signal investors need to scale up fattening farms, processing facilities, and branding initiatives? You don’t fix supply constraints by suppressing prices. You fix them by making the market worth investing in.
Meanwhile, Kuwait’s interest in Pakistan’s livestock is telling. Despite the global paranoia over Foot and Mouth Disease (FMD), Kuwait seemed ready to make an exception—either out of desperation or strategic necessity. Yet rather than seize the opportunity to build a world-class disease monitoring and export compliance system, we’re stuck endlessly debating whether to even allow the trade. And from a public health standpoint, live animals carry far higher disease risks than frozen meat, yet the system prefers to fight the wrong battles, in the wrong places, at the wrong times.
Instead, we have a stagnant, short-termist system where small producers chase quick profits, elite consumers demand artificially low prices, and everyone else gets left with the scraps of an industry that should be one of Pakistan’s crown jewels. Because if Pakistan has any true natural comparative advantage, it’s not textiles, wheat, sugar, or rice. It’s mutton.
Few countries possess the climate, terrain, and animal stock to dominate in small ruminant meat production. And with the right reforms, Pakistan could build a globally recognized mutton brand, exporting value-added products and cuisine alongside live animals and carcasses.
And here’s the kicker: banning live animal exports while allowing minimal-value frozen carcass exports makes little economic sense. Both drain domestic supply. Both compete with local demand. And if live exports raised domestic prices, wouldn’t that be exactly the market signal investors need to scale up fattening farms, processing facilities, and branding initiatives? You don’t fix supply constraints by suppressing prices. You fix them by making the market worth investing in.
Meanwhile, Kuwait’s interest in Pakistan’s livestock is telling. Despite the global paranoia over Foot and Mouth Disease (FMD), Kuwait seemed ready to make an exception—either out of desperation or strategic necessity. Yet rather than seize the opportunity to build a world-class disease monitoring and export compliance system, we’re stuck endlessly debating whether to even allow the trade. And from a public health standpoint, live animals carry far higher disease risks than frozen meat, yet the system prefers to fight the wrong battles, in the wrong places, at the wrong times.



