Supervivencia y transformación de la industria azucarera en el este de Cuba al final del siglo XIX

  1. Santamaría, Antonio
Revue:
América Latina en la Historia Económica

ISSN: 1405-2253 2007-3496

Année de publication: 2023

Titre de la publication: enero-abril

Volumen: 30

Número: 1

Type: Article

DOI: 10.18232/20073496.1228 DIALNET GOOGLE SCHOLAR lock_openDialnet editor

D'autres publications dans: América Latina en la Historia Económica

Résumé

The sugar industry was progressively concentrated in the western half of Cuba during the 19th century, due to the fact that the eastern was less populated and economically exploited, which also made it difficult for it to access slave labor and modernize it. This study shows that, nevertheless, in the second region, sugar mills survived and were transformed due to such conditions, and were generally larger and more efficient than those in the west, although grouped in dispersed areas and with substantial differences between them and in the responses that they gave to the need to modernize and lower its costs derived from the abolition and the increased of international competition. The research also shows that the explanation for this lies in the different context in which they had to operate in each of these regions.