Pakistan’s livestock sector, once hailed as the backbone of the rural economy, today stands as a painful example of policy neglect and scientific stagnation. Despite being the fourth largest milk-producing country in the world, Pakistan’s dairy and livestock productivity remains dismally low compared to global standards. The problem is not the animals — it is the policymakers who have failed to understand, prioritize, and implement genuine genetic improvement programmes.
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For decades, Pakistan’s livestock policies have been reactive rather than visionary. The focus has been on distributing imported semen, arranging fancy conferences, or establishing cosmetic model farms — all done without addressing the genetic core of the problem. The animals of Pakistan continue to suffer from low productivity, poor fertility, and weak disease resistance because no sustained national breeding policy has ever been implemented with scientific seriousness.
Even after seventy-eight years of independence, both the Federal Ministry and the provincial Livestock Departments have failed to respond to the emerging need for breed improvement aimed at enhancing milk production per animal. This glaring failure raises a serious question: what is the justification for maintaining such a huge administrative setup that delivers no tangible contribution to national milk yield or genetic progress? The system has become a bureaucratic burden rather than a vehicle of progress.
Equally alarming is the fact that research being conducted in veterinary universities and institutions across the country has little or no real impact on the livestock and dairy sector. Despite huge investments in postgraduate and PhD programmes, most research remains confined to academic theses and publications, with no translation into practical field applications. Veterinary institutions appear to be more engaged in awarding higher degrees than in solving the pressing challenges of low productivity, poor genetics, and inefficient breeding systems. This widening gap between academia and the field has rendered much of our research irrelevant to farmers’ realities.
The irony is that countries with far smaller livestock populations — such as the Netherlands, New Zealand, and Denmark — have achieved global leadership in dairy and beef production through disciplined genetic improvement and data-based breeding systems. In contrast, Pakistan continues to rely on random crossbreeding, poor record-keeping, and fragmented artificial insemination services that yield little progress.
Equally concerning is the absence of performance recording and data management systems. Without genetic evaluation, it is impossible to identify superior bulls or select elite cows for breeding. The result: decades of effort have gone in circles, while farmers continue to struggle with low yields and rising input costs. Policymakers boast of “milk revolution” slogans, but there is no real revolution on the ground — only frustration and loss.
If Pakistan truly wishes to uplift its livestock sector, it must prioritize a scientifically driven breeding policy. This means:
Establishing a National Genetic Evaluation Centre to record and analyze animal performance data.
Enforcing breed-wise improvement programmes led by geneticists and field veterinarians.
Ensuring farmer participation in recording milk yields and reproductive performance.
Building progeny testing stations and linking them with universities and private farms.
Ending the politically motivated distribution of imported semen and focusing instead on locally proven genetics.
Reorienting veterinary education and research toward field-based problem solving and technology transfer.
The livestock sector is not just about milk and meat — it is about livelihoods, food security, and rural dignity. When policymakers fail to deliver scientifically grounded strategies, they betray the trust of millions of farmers who depend on their animals for survival.
The time for cosmetic reforms is over. The government must empower livestock professionals, restore merit-based decision-making, and launch a genuine national programme for genetic improvement. Without this shift, Pakistan’s livestock will remain trapped in mediocrity — a tragic symbol of wasted potential, irrelevant research, and political negligence.





























