Chapter 51
The mandoer in charge of the air and kiln drying of coffee gets 25 florins per month, and the mandoer at the coffee mill 20 florins. A woman mandoer in charge of the coffee sorters receives 0.50 florin per day and 0.01 florin each for sewing the bags. This woman supervises all the sorters, fixes their status, and inspects their work. Unskilled labor (male) receives 0.40 florin per day in the coffee sheds, and the women sorters are paid 0.50 florin per picul of 136 pounds, measured before sorting. These women are graded into three cla.s.ses--those who can sort 1 picul in a day, those who can sort three-fourths of a picul, and those who can sort but one-half of a picul in a day. Some of these women become very expert in sorting, and the quality of the output of a factory is largely dependent on an ample supply of expert sorters. Many years are required to develop an adequate personnel for this department.
[Ill.u.s.tration: COFFEE TRANSPORT IN JAVA]
[Ill.u.s.tration: THE WORLD'S COFFEE TOWER COMPARED WITH THE EIFFEL AND WOOLWORTH TOWERS
The Woolworth Building, the world's loftiest office structure is 792 feet high from street to top of tower; its main section of 151 by 196 feet stretches up 386 feet, and its volume equals a total of 13,110,942 cubic feet. But a tower made of the year's supply of bags of green coffee (132 pounds each) would equal 73,649,115 cubic feet, or nearly six times the bulk of the Woolworth Building. In the same proportions it would rise 1,386 feet, with the lower section 260 by 340 feet and 670 feet high. Its dimensions would be nearly double those of the Woolworth Building in every direction. And the Eiffel Tower, reaching up 1,000 feet toward the sky would be lost in a tower made of a year's bags of coffee. Such a tower would stand 1,425 feet high on a base area of 230 feet square, the size of the Eiffel's first floor.]
CHAPTER XXII
THE PRODUCTION AND CONSUMPTION OF COFFEE
_A statistical study of world production of coffee by countries--Per capita figures of the leading consuming countries--Coffee-consumption figures compared with tea-consumption figures in the United States and the United Kingdom--Three centuries of coffee trading--Coffee drinking in the United States, past and present--Reviewing the 1921 trade in the United States_
The world's yearly production of coffee is on the average considerably more than one million tons. If this were all made up into the refres.h.i.+ng drink we get at our breakfast tables, there would be enough to supply every inhabitant of the earth with some sixty cups a year, representing a total of more than ninety billion cups. In terms of pounds the annual world output amounts to about two and a quarter billions--an amount so large that if it were done up in the familiar one-pound paper packages; and if these packages were laid end to end in a row; they would form a line long enough to reach to the moon. If this average yearly production were left in the sacks in which the coffee is s.h.i.+pped, the total of 17,500,000 would be enough to form a broad six-foot pavement reaching entirely across the United States, upon which a man could walk steadily for more than five months at the rate of twenty miles a day. This vast amount of coffee comes very largely from the western hemisphere; and about three-fourths of it, from a single country. The production, s.h.i.+pment, and preparation of this coffee, directly and indirectly support millions of workers; and many countries are entirely dependent on it for their prosperity and economic well-being.
During the crop year that ended June 30, 1921, this million-ton average was considerably exceeded, though it did not approach the record yield of all time in the crop year 1906-07, when the total amounted to almost 24,000,000 sacks; or, in round numbers, 3,000,000,000 pounds.
As indicated by the Statistical Record table, on page 274, Brazil produces more than all the rest of the world put together. Coffee growing, however, is general throughout tropical countries, and in most of them const.i.tutes one of the leading industries. Yet in most cases, the actual production of these countries can only be estimated, as accurate figures, showing the exact output, are seldom kept. But the contribution which each country makes to the total world traffic in coffee can be determined by its export figures, which are obtainable in reasonably accurate and up-to-date form. The table on page 276 gives the coffee export figures, in pounds, for practically every country that produces coffee for sale outside its own borders. Figures are given
STATISTICAL RECORD FOR THIRTY-EIGHT YEARS
_Crops_ /--------------------------------- Fiscal Rio and Other Total Year Santos Countries (Bags) (July 1 to (Bags)[I] (Bags) June 30)
1883-84 5,047,000 4,526,000 9,573,000 1884-85 6,206,000 4,004,000 10,210,000 1885-86 5,565,000 3,505,000 9,070,000 1886-87 6,078,000 4,106,000 10,184,000 1887-88 3,033,000 3,214,000 6,247,000 1888-89 6,827,000 3,672,000 10,499,000 1889-90 4,260,000 3,965,000 8,225,000 1890-91 5,358,000 2,886,000 8,244,000 1891-92 7,397,000 4,453,000 11,850,000 1892-93 6,203,000 4,887,000 11,090,000 1893-94 4,309,000 5,307,000 9,616,000 1894-95 6,695,000 5,069,000 11,764,000 1895-96 5,476,000 4,901,000 10,377,000 1896-97 8,680,000 5,238,000 13,918,000 1897-98 10,462,000 5,596,000 16,058,000 1898-99 8,771,000 4,985,000 13,756,000 1899-00 8,959,000 4,842,000 13,801,000 1900-01 10,927,000 4,173,000 15,100,000 1901-02 15,439,000 4,296,000 19,735,000 1902-03 12,324,000 4,340,000 16,664,000 1903-04 10,408,000 5,575,000 15,983,000 1904-05 9,968,000 4,480,000 14,448,000 1905-06 10,227,000 4,565,000 14,792,000 1906-07 19,654,000 4,160,000 23,814,000 1907-08 10,283,000 4,551,000 14,834,000 1908-09 12,419,000 4,499,000 16,918,000 1909-10 14,944,000 4,181,000 19,125,000 1910-11 10,548,000 3,976,000 14,524,000 1911-12 12,491,000 4,918,000 17,409,000 1912-13 11,458,000 4,915,000 16,373,000 1913-14 13,816,000 5,796,000 19,612,000 1914-15 12,867,000 5,019,000 17,886,000 1915-16 14,992,000 4,764,000 19,756,000 1916-17 12,112,000 4,579,000 16,691,000 1917-18 15,127,000 3,720,000 18,847,000 1918-19 9,140,000 4,500,000 13,640,000 1919-20 6,700,000 8,463,000 15,163,000 1920-21 13,816,000 6,467,000 20,283,000
_Deliveries_ /---------------------------------
Fiscal United Year Europe States Total (July 1 to (Bags) (Bags) (Bags) June 30)
1883-84 6,774,000 2,635,000 9,409,000 1884-85 7,388,000 3,169,000 10,557,000 1885-86 7,198,000 2,938,000 10,136,000 1886-87 7,363,000 2,672,000 10,035,000 1887-88 5,888,000 2,164,000 8,052,000 1888-89 6,589,000 2,659,000 9,249,000 1889-90 6,716,000 2,704,000 9,420,000 1890-91 6,046,000 2,673,000 8,719,000 1891-92 6,392,000 4,412,000 10,804,000 1892-93 6,457,000 4,389,000 10,945,000 1893-94 6,272,000 4,298,000 10,570,000 1894-95 6,816,000 4,396,000 11,212,000 1895-96 6,803,000 4,339,000 11,142,000 1896-97 7,155,000 5,080,000 12,244,000 1897-98 8,535,000 6,036,000 14,571,000 1898-99 7,798,000 5,682,000 13,480,000 1899-00 8,937,000 6,035,000 14,972,000 1900-01 8,486,000 5,843,000 14,329,000 1901-02 8,853,000 6,663,000 15,516,000 1902-03 9,118,000 6,847,000 15,966,000 1903-04 9,280,000 6,853,000 16,133,000 1904-05 9,475,000 6,687,000 16,163,000 1905-06 9,934,000 6,806,000 16,741,000 1906-07 10,502,000 7,042,000 17,544,000 1907-08 10,481,000 7,043,000 17,525,000 1908-09 11,129,000 7,519,000 18,649,000 1909-10 10,811,000 7,287,000 18,098,000 1910-11 10,492,000 7,015,000 17,507,000 1911-12 10,712,000 6,762,000 17,474,000 1912-13 10,144,000 6,675,000 16,820,000 1913-14 11,027,000 7,545,000 18,573,000 1914-15 13,368,000 8,010,000 21,378,000 1915-16 11,050,000 8,834,000 19,884,000 1916-17 5,171,000 9,046,000 14,217,000 1917-18 6,209,000 8,624,000 14,833,000 1918-19 6,073,000 8,994,000 15,067,000 1919-20 7,047,000 9,683,000 16,730,000 1920-21 6,397,000 9,701,000 16,099,000
_Spot_ Fiscal _Visible_ _Quotations_, Year _Supply_ _Rio No. 7_ (July 1 to _July 1._ _New York_, June 30) (Bags) _July 1._
1883-84 1884-85 5,398,000 8-1/4 1885-86 5,051,000 7-1/8 1886-87 3,985,000 8-1/4 1887-88 4,134,000 16-7/8 1888-89 2,329,000 13-1/2 1889-90 3,579,000 14-1/2 1890-91 2,384,000 17-1/2 1891-92 1,909,000 17-3/8 1892-93 2,955,000 17-7/8 1893-94 3,100,000 16-5/8 1894-95 2,146,000 16-1/2 1895-96 3,115,000 15-3/4 1896-97 2,588,000 13 1897-98 3,975,000 7-3/8 1898-99 5,435,000 6-1/4 1899-00 6,200,000 6-1/8 1900-01 5,840,000 8-15/16 1901-02 6,867,000 6 1902-03 11,261,000 5-1/4 1903-04 11,900,000 5-3/16 1904-05 12,361,000 7-1/8 1905-06 11,265,000 7-3/4 1906-07 9,636,000 7-15/16 1907-08 16,400,000 6-3/8 1908-09 14,126,000 6-1/4 1909-10 12,841,000 7-3/4 1910-11 13,719,000 8-3/8 1911-12 11,070,000 13-1/8 1912-13 11,048,000 14-3/4 1913-14 10,285,000 9-5/8 1914-15 11,302,000 8-3/4 1915-16 7,523,000 7-1/2 1916-17 7,328,000 9-1/8 1917-18 7,793,000 9-1/2 1918-19 8,783,000 8-1/2 1919-20 7,173,000 22-1/4 1920-21 6,909,000 13-1/4
[I] 1 Bag=132.27 lbs.
[Ill.u.s.tration: THE WORLD'S COFFEE CUP AND THE WORLD'S LARGEST s.h.i.+P
The statistical sharks talk of the 17,566,000 bags, or 2,318,712,000 pounds of coffee that the world drinks every year; but how many really appreciate what those huge figures mean? For instance, computing 40 cups of beverage to the pound, there are more than 90,000,000,000 cups drunk annually, or enough to fill a gigantic cup 4,000 feet in diameter and 40 feet deep, on which the "Majestic," the world's largest s.h.i.+p, would appear floating approximately as shown in the drawing.]
For the most part, these figures of exportation are the only ones available to indicate the actual coffee production in the countries named. The following additional data, however, will serve to show the extent to which the coffee-raising industry has developed in most of these countries, and in a few places of minor importance not named in the table:
BRAZIL. The coffee industry of Brazil, which has furnished seventy percent of the world's coffee during the last ten years, has developed in a century and a half. Brazilian soil first made the acquaintance of the coffee plant at Para in 1723. A small export trade to Europe had developed by 1770, the year when the first plantation was established in the state of Rio de Janeiro, and from which the country's great industry really dates. Development at first was apparently slow, as no exports are recorded until the beginning of the nineteenth century; so that the history of Brazil's coffee trade is a matter entirely of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Once started, however, the new line of export made rapid progress. In 1800, the amount of coffee exported was 1720 pounds, contained in thirteen bags. Twenty years later, 12,896,000 pounds were s.h.i.+pped, the number of bags being 97,498. Ten years later, in 1830, this amount had increased to 64,051,000 pounds; and in 1840, to 137,300,000 pounds. In 1852-53, the receipts for s.h.i.+pment at the ports were double that amount, 284,592,000 pounds; in 1860-61 they were 420,420,000 pounds; in 1870-71 they had increased to 427,416,000 pounds; in 1880-81 they were 764,945,000 pounds; in 1890-91, 739,654,000 pounds; and at the beginning of this century, 1900-01, they were 1,504,424,000 pounds, having pa.s.sed the one billion-pound mark in 1896-97. The highest point of coffee receipts in the country's history was reached in 1906-07 with 2,699,644,694 pounds; and since that year, the amount has staid at about one and one-half billion pounds. Further expansion in the last fifteen years has been closely regulated to prevent overproduction.
EXPORTS OF COFFEE FROM THE COFFEE-PRODUCING COUNTRIES OF THE WORLD
_Country_ _Five-Year Average_ South America: _Year_ _Pounds_ _Pounds_ Brazil 1920 1,524,382,650 1,469,949,180 Colombia 1920 190,961,953[c] 172,862,121 Venezuela 1920 73,726,632 110,174,946 Guiana, Br. 1917 267,344 257,152 Guiana, Fr. 1918 1,100 970 Guiana, D. 1918 3,856 923,644[d]
Ecuador 1919 3,729,413 5,843,033 Peru 1919 370,655 455,212 Central America: Salvador 1920 82,864,668 78,953,339 Nicaragua 1920 15,345,398 23,243,865 Costa Rica 1921[a] 29,401,683 28,667,262 Guatemala 1920 94,205,569 88,213,080 Honduras 1920[b] 1,091,977 646,574 Mexico 1918 30,172,065 47,555,514[d]
West Indies: Haiti 1920[b] 61,970,694[e] 54,308,959[d]
Dominican Republic 1920 1,361,666 3,497,866 Jamaica 1919 8,246,672 7,918,781 Porto Rico 1921 29,967,879[f] 30,033,471[d][f]
Trinidad & Tobago 1920 73,201 19,639 Martinique 1918 10,358 17,219 Guadeloupe 1918 2,144,855 1,594,146 Dutch East Indies 1920 99,020,453[i] 103,701,297[h]
Pacific Islands: Br. North Borneo 1918 1,984 6,618 New Caledonia 1916 1,248,024 784,176 New Hebrides 1917 625,224 608,410[g]
Hawaii 1921 4,979,121[f] 4,244,479[d][f]
Reunion 1918 3,527 26,455 Asia: Aden (Arabia) 1921[b] 9,463,104 10,837,893 Br. India 1920[b] 30,526,832 23,767,744 French Indo-China 1918 79,145 516,978 Africa: Eritrea 1918 728,840 315,698 Somaliland, Fr. 1917 11,222,736 9,321,930 Somaliland, Br. 1918 440,272 233,908 Somaliland, It. 1918 3,747 3,306 Abyssinia 1917 17,324,223 12,744,406 German East Africa (former) 1913 2,334,450 2,649,047[d]
Br. East African Protectorate 1918 18,735,572 8,397,541 Uganda 1918 9,999,845 5,076,091 Nyasaland 1918 122,796 92,593 Mayotte (including Comoro Is.)1914 3,306 660 Madagascar 1918 707,676 981,047 Angola 1913 10,655,934 10,459,724 Belgian Congo 1919 347,588 186,432[h]
Fr. Equatorial Africa 1916 48,060 47,046 Nigeria 1916 3,527 19,180 Ivory Coast 1918 66,358 49,162 Gold Coast 1917 660 220 French Guinea 1918 1,320 1,320 Spanish Guinea 1918 8,150 3,968[h]
St. Thomas & Prince's Is. 1916 484,350 1,125,448 Liberia 1917 761,300 Cape Verde Islands 1916 1,442,910 1,100,095
[a] Crop year.
[b] Fiscal year.
[c] Including small proportion of unhusked coffee.
[d] Four-year average.
[e] Not including 6,322,167 pounds "triage" or waste coffee.
[f] Including s.h.i.+pments to continental United States.
[g] Two-year average.
[h] Three-year average.
[i] Java and Madura only
It is estimated that the area in the coffee-growing section suitable for coffee raising covers 1,158,000 square miles, or more than one-third the area of continental United States. The state of So Paulo is the chief producing state, and supplies practically half the world's annual output. Most of this So Paulo coffee is exported through the port of Santos, which is consequently the leading coffee port of the world.
Besides Santos, the ports of Rio de Janeiro and Victoria are of much importance in the coffee trade, although some twenty or thirty million pounds are exported each year through the port of Bahia, and smaller amounts through various other ports. The crop year of Brazil runs from July 1 to June 30, the heaviest receipts for s.h.i.+pment coming as a rule in the months of August, September, and October of each year. One-third of the season's crop is usually received at ports of s.h.i.+pment before the last of October, sometimes as early as the latter part of September; one-half comes in by the middle or last of November; and two-thirds is usually received, by the end of January.
[Ill.u.s.tration: No. 1--COFFEE EXPORTS, 1850-1920
This diagram shows the exports of the princ.i.p.al coffee-producing countries, omitting Brazil]
[Ill.u.s.tration: No. 21--1 COFFEE EXPORTS, 1916-1920
This diagram shows the exports of the leading coffee countries (except Brazil) in a period covering most of the World War]
VENEZUELA. The coffee plant was introduced into Venezuela in 1784, being brought from Martinique; and the first s.h.i.+pment abroad, consisting of 233 bags, was made five years later. By 1830-31, production had increased to 25,454,000 pounds; and in the next twenty years, it more than trebled, amounting to 83,717,000 pounds in 1850-51. Since then, however, the increase has been much more gradual. In 1881-82, 94,369,000 pounds were produced; and about the same amount, 95,170,000 pounds, in 1889-90. Twentieth-century production has apparently exceeded the hundred-million mark on the average, although there are no definite statistics beyond export figures. These showed 86,950,000 pounds sent abroad in 1904-05; 103,453,000 pounds in 1908-09; and 88,155,000 pounds in 1918; the trade in the last-named year being cut down by war conditions. In 1919, the extraordinary amount of 179,414,815 pounds was exported, the high figure being due to the release of coffee stored from previous years. It has been estimated that domestic consumption of coffee would amount to a maximum of 25,000,000 pounds yearly, but may be much less than that. The United States and France have in the past been Venezuela's best customers.
COLOMBIA. Prior to 1912, the total production of coffee in Colombia was around 80,000,000 pounds annually, of which some 3,000,000 or 4,000,000 pounds were consumed in the country itself. But in the last decade production has been advancing rapidly, and the present production is the heaviest in the history of the country. The industry has practically grown up in the last seventy years, the exports for the decade 1852-53 to 1861-62 averaging only about 940,000 pounds; in the decade following, about 5,700,000 pounds; and, in the ten years from 1872-73 to 1881-82, about 12,600,000 pounds, according to an unofficial compilation.
Exportations had advanced to about 47,000,000 pounds by 1895; and to 80,000,000 pounds by 1906. As large quant.i.ties of Colombian coffee are s.h.i.+pped out through Venezuela, and because of the lack of detailed statistics in Colombia, the actual exportation each year is not easy to determine; but the following figures, obtained by a trade commissioner of the United States, may be taken as a fairly accurate estimate of exports from 1906 to 1918:
COLUMBIAN COFFEE EXPORTS _Year_ _Sacks (138 lbs.)_