Abstract:
Effective management of food safety and product quality issues is critical for maintaining and enhancing the competitiveness of
livestock production. Food safety and quality standards are now and will become increasingly important for the competitiveness of
livestock products. For most producers and processors of livestock products, as well as for most livestock products, domestic demand
remains the main, if not the only, driving mechanism for market improvements in food safety and quality. Better imports entering the
market already indicate the need to raise standards, at least to maintain domestic market share, as well as to achieve import substitution or
appeal to export markets. International experience shows that the implementation of quality standards should be stimulated by the private
sector, but not by the government. However, the government plays an important role in improving the skills of veterinarians and providing
advisory services to help livestock producers and processors meet the ISO (International Organization of Standardization) and the CCPHA
(Critical Control Point of hazard analysis) standards. In other to create conditions for the prosperity of the livestock industry, the
government needs to pay more attention to the following two key areas: reducing market costs and prudent management of food safety and
quality of livestock products. With the transition to more dispersed cattle breeding, the cost of re–establishing links between scattered and
small livestock producers and consumers, local or foreign, has increased. But such costs can be reduced. To ensure food safety, meet
consumer requirements and increase the ability to compete with imports, domestic producers need to strengthen their capacity to achieve
higher standards of safety and quality. Attention should be paid to such instruments of the import substitution strategy as an active
industrial policy, trade protection and export promotion. The purpose of this study is to analyze the meat industry of Kazakhstan, to present
the problems that the industry is facing at the present stage and direct their solutions and the tasks of the state in this mechanism. The scientific novelty of the study lies in the development of measures to develop policies in the field of the meat industry in the context of
import–substituting policies and the development of appropriate organizational and economic tools for their implementation