Fr. 57.50

Industrialization of Sao Paulo, 1800-1945

English · Paperback / Softback

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Informationen zum Autor By Warren Dean Klappentext São Paulo is one of the few places in the underdeveloped world where an advanced industrial system has grown out of a tropical raw-material-exporting economy. By 1960 there were 830,000 industrial workers in the state, producing $3.3 billion worth of goods. It had become Latin America's largest industrial center.This is a study of the early years of manufacturing in São Paulo: how it was influenced by the growth and decline of the coffee trade; where it found its markets, its credit, and its labor force; and how it confronted the competition of imports. The principal focus, however, is on the manufacturers themselves, whose perceptions of their opportunities determined how industrialization was brought about. Warren Dean discusses their social origins, their connections with other sectors of the elite, their attitudes toward workers and consumers, and their view of the potentialities of economic development. He analyzes the political activities of the manufacturers, to discover both how they promoted their interests and how they confronted the larger challenge of social and political transformation.Paradoxically, the industrialization of São Paulo is not a "success story" of private entrepreneurship. Until after World War II manufacturing grew quite slowly, and its hallmarks were always low productivity, technical backwardness, and consumer hostility. More than half of the state's present large-scale factory production and nearly all of its heavy industry was built by foreign capital or state enterprise, not by privately owned firms. Dean shows that this outcome is partly a consequence of the historical experience of domestic manufacture.Throughout the book the author points out the "peculiar articulations" of the industrial system of São Paulo-the significant social and political interests that determined what kinds of development were possible. The result is an exposition of an unusual case study in twentieth-century economic development. Inhaltsverzeichnis AcknowledgmentsA Note on Brazilian currencyI. The Coffee Trade Begets IndustryPart One. Economic and Social Origins of Entrepreneurship, 1880–1914 II. The Economic Matrix: ImportingIII. Social Origins: The Plantation BourgeoisieIV. Social Origins: The Immigrant BourgeoisieV. The Merger of Emerging ElitesPart Two. Industrial Growth: Circumstance and Structure, 1914–1930 VI. The Effects of World WarVII. Growth and the Structure of IndustryVIII. Conflicts among the Elite: The Beginning of Self-ConsciousnessPart Three. The Industrialists Confront Society and the State, 1920–1945 IX. The Industrialists and “The Social Question”X. The Industrialists and the Liberal StateXI. The Industrialists and the Estado NôvoConclusionBibliographyIndex...

Product details

Authors Warren Dean
Publisher University Of Texas Press
 
Languages English
Product format Paperback / Softback
Released 01.01.1969
 
EAN 9780292735620
ISBN 978-0-292-73562-0
No. of pages 282
Series Llilas Latin American Monograp
LLILAS Latin American Monograph Series
Subjects Humanities, art, music > History > General, dictionaries
Non-fiction book > History > Miscellaneous
Social sciences, law, business > Business > General, dictionaries

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