Erik Green
Professor
Window of Opportunities : The Great Depression, Protectionism and the Rise of Profitable Settler Agriculture in Africa
Author
Editor
- Joseph Inikori
Summary, in English
The establishment of profitable European settler agriculture overseas has received considerable scholarly attention. Much of this literature focus on the ‘New World’ and the European off-shoots. It is generally argued that the golden age of these settler societies were 1870 to 1913. A globalization wave gave the settler farmers access to migrant labour and global markets. By contrast, European
settler agriculture in British Africa became profitable during the inter-war period, characterized by falling terms of trade, volatile global markets and eventually a global depression and increased protectionism. This chapter compare three such cases – tea production in Nyasaland, coffee in Kenya and tobacco in Southern Rhodesia. The chapter shows that increased protectionism facilitated the growth of profitable settler agriculture. It enabled the settlers to enter highly competitive markets.
settler agriculture in British Africa became profitable during the inter-war period, characterized by falling terms of trade, volatile global markets and eventually a global depression and increased protectionism. This chapter compare three such cases – tea production in Nyasaland, coffee in Kenya and tobacco in Southern Rhodesia. The chapter shows that increased protectionism facilitated the growth of profitable settler agriculture. It enabled the settlers to enter highly competitive markets.
Department/s
- Department of Economic History
- Economic development of the Global South
Publishing year
2022
Language
English
Pages
202-224
Publication/Series
British Imperialism and Globalization, c. 1650-1960 : Essays in Honour of Patrick O'Brien
Document type
Book chapter
Publisher
The Boydell Press
Topic
- Economic History
Keywords
- Imperialism
- Africa
- settler agriculture
- protectionism
Status
Published
Project
- Development or exploitation - The long term developments of settler farming in Kenya, Malawi, South Africa and Zimbabwe
ISBN/ISSN/Other
- ISBN: 978 1 78327 646 2