Coffee
Coffee is a beverage brewed from roasted, ground coffee beans. Darkly colored, bitter, and slightly acidic, coffee has a stimulating effect on humans, primarily due to its caffeine content, but decaffeinated coffee is also commercially a ...
production began to develop in
Guatemala
Guatemala, officially the Republic of Guatemala, is a country in Central America. It is bordered to the north and west by Mexico, to the northeast by Belize, to the east by Honduras, and to the southeast by El Salvador. It is hydrologically b ...
in the 1850s. Coffee is an important element of
Guatemala's economy.
Guatemala was
Central America
Central America is a subregion of North America. Its political boundaries are defined as bordering Mexico to the north, Colombia to the southeast, the Caribbean to the east, and the Pacific Ocean to the southwest. Central America is usually ...
's top producer of coffee for most of the 20th and the beginning of the 21st century, until being
overtaken by Honduras in 2011.
Illegal exports to Honduras and Mexico are not reflected in official statistics.
Geography
The most suitable temperature for the healthy growth and abundant production of coffee in Guatemala is that of . In lands situated at an altitude of above sea level, young plants must be shaded.
For the most part, the coffee plantations are situated at an altitude varying from to above sea level. At elevations greater than , the plantations must be sheltered from the cold north winds.
History
Guatemala Commodity Exports Prior to Coffee Domination
The coffee industry began to develop in Guatemala in the 1850s and 1860s, initially mixing its cultivation with
cochineal
The cochineal ( , ; ''Dactylopius coccus'') is a scale insect in the suborder Sternorrhyncha, from which the natural dye carmine is derived. A primarily sessility (motility), sessile parasitism, parasite native to tropical and subtropical Sout ...
, though the latter export had held monopoly over Guatemala's raw export economy since the Spanish colonial era.
In 1850, for example, 93% of the colony's exports were in cochineal, the natural red dye created from the dried and crushed bugs of the ''coccidae'' family of scale insects.
Natural indigo was another prominent export encouraged by the Spanish colonial government, though its output declined by the end of the 18th century.
Small coffee plantations flourished in
Amatitlán and
Antigua
Antigua ( ; ), also known as Waladli or Wadadli by the local population, is an island in the Lesser Antilles. It is one of the Leeward Islands in the Caribbean region and the most populous island of the country of Antigua and Barbuda. Antigua ...
areas in the southwest.
The Expansion of Coffee Production Under President Barrios' Liberal Regime (1871)
Guatemala's entrance into the coffee export market was catalyzed by poor cochineal harvests in the mid 19th century, the invention of aniline dyes that reduced demand for natural dyes, and neighboring Costa Rica's emerging coffee export success.
Cochineal harvests were also considered to be "precarious", highly localized, and burdened by inefficient transportation from the limited region in which it could be produced. By comparison, coffee could be cultivated in greater portions of the countryside,
attracted high market prices, was less perishable, and cheaper to transport across long distances. For a newly independent state, integration of rural production into the international market promised a wider revenue base for the government.
Despite suitable climate for cultivation, initial growth of coffee production was hindered by lack of knowledge and technology,
communication, cheap labor, and clear land title.
The state inherited a land tenure scheme from Spanish colonization that discouraged communities from selling land to those who were not indigenous, as the government drew a substantial amount of its revenue from Indian tribute generated on indigenous lands. In fact, and until 1877, it was only with state permission that community lands could be sold to outsiders.
Despite state control over the transfer of land title, land relations during the colonial period could be characterized by an inability of political and commercial elites to gain power in the countryside as landowners.
In the period immediately following independence in 1821, the newly empowered liberal regime passed a slew of land laws that would attempt to transform customary land tenure under which village access to and ownership over community and ancestral lands for subsistence and grazing was foundational.
These liberal reforms were intended to modernize the country and align it with English liberalism, and included the conversion of ejidos into private, family farms, the substitution of a land tax for a tithe to stimulate agricultural production, and the auctioning of church land.
However, these reforms were functionally useless so long as elites did not have access to the rural countryside and were further complicated by civil wars, banditry, and disease from the 1820s to 1840s.
The Conservative regime that followed
Rafael Carrera’s 1839 peasant revolt did little to implement the Liberals’ land tenure regime, and this period was marked by a relative increase in political disinterest in the rural countryside.
For a generation, indigenous communities in the countryside were abandoned by church and central government institutions, the former having been weakened by declining revenues and an adversarial relationship with the state. As such, these village communities were left free to develop “traditional” society and a culture of “closed corporate peasant community”.
Many early coffee planters had to rely on personal loans from family members and loans backed by their urban properties to finance their coffee estates (fincas).
McCreery calls the rise of coffee production and export in the latter half of the 19th century as “the most fundamental change” in Guatemala’s institutions since the Spanish conquest. This period of unprecedented change was ushered in by the Liberal Revolution of 1871 and the coinciding seizure of power by General
Justo Rufino Barrios
Justo Rufino Barrios Auyón (19 July 1835 – 2 April 1885) was a Guatemalan politician and military general who served as President of Guatemala from 1873 to his death in 1885. He was known for his liberal reforms and his attempts to reun ...
, himself a coffee planter. Prior to the Liberal Revolution, coffee accounted for half of Guatemala’s exports, however, cultivable ejido land on the southern coast and the highlands represented thousands of acres laying unproductive and for integration into the coffee export economy.
Barrios’ regime quickly began to increase coffee producers’ access to the rural countryside by encouraging private investors to expand and modernize the railroads, roads, telegraphs, and other infrastructure. The founding of the state’s first agricultural bank and the expansion of merchant banking
encouraged the flow of capital into agricultural productivity. Cheap land was secured, for example, by the passage of an 1873 provision that declared certain coastal lands ''baldíos'' (uncultivated or fallow) and to be sold at low, fixed prices despite several communities laying claim to the lands. Public lands were opened to extractive activities like rubber, chicle, and lumber harvesting.
Cheap land was further secured by the “revolutionary” issuance of Decree 170 in 1877, ending censo enfiteusis,
a land contract that allows an owner to confer usufruct rights to an individual in exchange for an annual payment equal to some percentage of the land’s value. Tenants who had previously had user rights over the land, but not official title, were given a short time period to purchase it.
What resulted in the following decades was mass dispossession of communal, indigenous lands for coffee production.
It is important note, however, that the Liberal Regime did not abolish community property and allowed it to continue de facto and de jure as capitalist production of food could not compete with peasant production in domestic markets. Ejidos were also where coffee producers could secure indigenous community members as a reliable, and reproducing, supply of cheap, seasonal labor.
Due to coffee’s labor-intensive, six-year maturation period before producing fruit, cheap labor was critical to expanding production,
and the expansion of coffee plantations was limited largely due to a scarcity of labor.
This cheap input was further secured by the issuance of Decree 177, also in 1877, that legalized debt peonage and reinstated ''mandamientos'', a labor draft system in which governors were compelled to supply laborers to export producers.
The spatial expansion of coffee occurred incrementally and persistence of a community on their land depended on several factors including its location, population, external demands on the community for land and labor, and how quickly community leaders could understand and leverage new land tenure laws. This heterogeneity made it extremely difficult for indigenous communities to violently mobilize against coffee expansion.
Furthermore, the state's expansion of telegraph networks into the interior, the professionalization of the military, and surveillance by local military chiefs and state political agents ensured that communities' control of the countryside in which the state could not penetrate during the 1830s and 1840s would not be replicated.
However, indigenous populations did attempt to escape coffee labor demands by fleeing to other areas domestically, fleeing to neighboring countries of Belize and Mexico, or fleeing into the wilderness.
Coffee exports made up just 1% of exports in 1860. By 1880, and as a consequence of Barrios’ liberal reforms, coffee accounted for 92% of Guatemala’s export value, completely overshadowing any other export commodity.
For example, in 1887 coffee production was over and by 1891, it was over . From 1879 to 1883, Guatemala exported pounds of coffee.
The domination of coffee as an export commodity also provided a generous increase to state budgets—the Guatemalan government was able to nearly triple its operating budget and nearly quintuple its war budget between 1870 and 1890.
The legacy of land privatization and consolidation continues into the modern day—65% of arable land was owned by 2% of the population by the end of the 20th century.
By 1902 the most important coffee plantations were found on the southern coast,
and production was increasingly bolstered by foreign companies who possessed the financial power to buy plantations and provide investment.
Many acres of land were suitable for this cultivation, and the varieties that were produced in the temperate regions were superior. Coffee was grown around
Guatemala City
Guatemala City (, also known colloquially by the nickname Guate), is the Capital city, national capital and largest city of the Guatemala, Republic of Guatemala. It is also the Municipalities of Guatemala, municipal capital of the Guatemala Depa ...
,
Chimaltenango, and
Verapaz. The majority of the plantations were located in the departments of Guatemala, Amatitlan, Sacatepequez, Solola, Retalhuleu, Quezaltenango, San Marcos, and Alta Verapaz.
Anacafé

Anacafé (Asociación Nacional del Café) was established in 1960 as a national coffee association, representing all coffee producers in Guatemala. It was initiated by the precursors to the
International Coffee Organization
The International Coffee Organization (ICO) was set up in 1963 in London under the auspices of the United Nations (UN) due to the economic importance of coffee. It administers the International Coffee Agreement (ICA) which is an important instrum ...
, as a way of centralizing statistics of the nation's coffee production as it continued the work of ''La Oficina Central del Café'', previously established and operated by the central government which in turn was established in 1928.
Anacafé has established a Guatemalan Coffees brand and defined eight coffee regions under the slogan "A Rainbow of Choices". The regions are: Acatenango Valley, Antigua Coffee, Traditional Atitlan, Rainforest Coban, Fraijanes Plateau, Highland Huehue, New Oriente, and Volcanic San Marcos.
Anacafé has built the Analab coffee laboratories, established a program for children called Funcafé, and publishes ''El Cafetal'', a coffee magazine. Anacafé represents Guatemala in the
International Coffee Organization
The International Coffee Organization (ICO) was set up in 1963 in London under the auspices of the United Nations (UN) due to the economic importance of coffee. It administers the International Coffee Agreement (ICA) which is an important instrum ...
's meetings and receives income only from service charges on exported coffee items.
Labor issues
Research has shown that some of Guatemala's coffee producers used
child labor
Child labour is the exploitation of children through any form of work that interferes with their ability to attend regular school, or is mentally, physically, socially and morally harmful. Such exploitation is prohibited by legislation w ...
in 2013, according to the
U.S. Department of Labor
The United States Department of Labor (DOL) is one of the executive departments of the U.S. federal government. It is responsible for the administration of federal laws governing occupational safety and health, wage and hour standards, unem ...
.
See also
*
List of countries by coffee production
This is a list of countries by coffee production, based on data from the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) for 2023. This data covers the production of green coffee beans, the primary ingredient in the production of processed coffee. Roasti ...
References
External links
*
{{Coffee production
Economy of Guatemala
Agriculture in Guatemala
Guatemala
Guatemala, officially the Republic of Guatemala, is a country in Central America. It is bordered to the north and west by Mexico, to the northeast by Belize, to the east by Honduras, and to the southeast by El Salvador. It is hydrologically b ...