Coffee production in Venezuela began in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries in the Premontane shankarof the Andes mountains. José Gumilla, a Jesuit priest, is credited with introducing coffee into Venezuela, in 1732. Its production is attributed to the large demand for the product, coupled with cheap labour and low land costs.[1] It was first exported to Brazil.[2] Coffee production in Venezuela led to the "complex migration" of people to this region in the late nineteenth century.[3] Though Venezuela was ranked close to Colombia at one time in coffee production, by 2001, it produced less than one percent of the world's coffee.[4]
^Price, Marie (January 1994). "Hands for the coffee: migrants and western Venezuela's coffee production, 1870-1930". Journal of Historical Geography. 20 (1): 62–80. doi:10.1006/jhge.1994.1006.