Opium production in Myanmar


Opium production in Myanmar has historically been a major contributor to the country's gross domestic product. Myanmar is the world's second largest producer of opium after Afghanistan, producing some 25% of the world's opium, and forms part of the Golden Triangle. The opium industry was a monopoly during colonial times and has since been illegally operated by corrupt officials in the Burmese military and rebel fighters, primarily as the basis for heroin manufacture.
Production is mainly concentrated in the Shan and Kachin states. Due to poverty, opium production is attractive to impoverished farmers as the financial return from poppy is 17 times more than that of rice. The yield during 2012 was 690 tons, valued at US $359 million.
Economic specialists indicate that recent trends in growth have the potential to increase the gap between the rich and the poor in the country, empowering criminal rackets at the expense of democracy.

History

Opium has been present in Myanmar since as early as the 1750s, during which the Kongbaug Dynasty was in power. The United States provided economic aid to the country then known as Burma in 1948 to reduce the opium trade. Between 1974–78, Burma received eighteen helicopters from the US for opium caravan interception.
In 1990, Myanmar was producing more than half of the world's opium. The percentage dropped to one third by 1998. In 1999, the country reported a goal to become opium-free by 2014.
According to the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, it is estimated that in 2005 there was some dedicated to opium cultivation in Myanmar. According to a United Nations report, opium production has increased every year since then and as of 2012 had increased to around. There is a crackdown on the trade and since 1998 production in Myanmar has fallen overall by some 83% as of 2012; and in 2012 alone some of poppy fields had been eradicated, but the general trend is a steady increase in production according to recent surveys.
As of 2012, some 300,000 households in Myanmar were involved in the industry. As of 2012, China had over 1.1 million registered drug addicts and accounted for over 70 per cent of all heroin consumption in the Asia-Pacific region. In 2012, Myanmar produced 690 metric tons with a value of approximately $359 million.
Myanmar is also one of three countries of the golden "triangle" with Thailand and Laos forming the other two arms, where opium production accounted for about 50% of the world's consumption in 1990 but was reduced to about 33% by 1998. Myanmar part of this triangle is reported to be a lawless region.

Production

Myanmar is the world's second largest producer of opium after Afghanistan, producing some 25% of the world's opium. In the past, though, it was "the world's unrivaled leader in opiate production". Production is mainly concentrated in the Shan and Kachin states. China is the most important market for Burmese opium, due to an increase in heroin addiction in the country.
On an annual rate, production of opium in the country was estimated to be some, according to the Central Intelligence Agency in 1956. However, in 2012 it was a record 690 metric tons with estimated value of about US $359 million, due to increased demand during last six years in succession, in Asia.
In just one year between 2011 and 2012 the land area brought under opium crop has shot up from 40,000 ha to 51,000 ha, a 17% increase.

Drug movement

Prior to the 1980s, heroin was typically transported from Myanmar to Thailand, before being trafficked by sea to Hong Kong, which was and still remains the major transit point at which heroin enters the international market. Now, drug trafficking has circumvented to southern China because of a growing market for drugs in China, before reaching Hong Kong.

The Burmese economy and opium

The prominence of major drug traffickers have allowed them to penetrate other sectors of the Burmese economy, including the banking, airline, hotel and infrastructure industries. Their investment in infrastructure have allowed them to make more profits, facilitate drug trafficking and money laundering.
Due to the ongoing, rural-based insurgencies within Myanmar, many farmers have little alternative but to engage in opium production, which is used to make heroin. Most of the money earned from opium sales go into the drug barons' pockets; the amount left is used to sustain the livelihood of the farmers. Economic specialists indicate that recent trends in growth have the potential to increase the gap between the rich and the poor in the country, empowering criminal rackets at the expense of democracy.

Eradication programme

With the establishment of the democratic government after the rule of a military junta, there is hope that opium eradication would be a serious public policy. The new government has taken steps to reform the system but the ground situation is otherwise as there is an upsurge in its production and this is attributed in a report by the UN as due to "the resurgence in opium production in Southeast Asia is the demand for opiates, both locally and in the region in general".
Government reports claim that in 2012, a fourfold increase of elimination of poppy fields has been effected amounting to 24,000 hectares of poppy fields. According to the U.N. Office on Drugs and Crime land poppy cultivation registered an increase of 17 percent, the highest increase in eight years.