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Bureaucrats, Planters, and Workers - The Making of the Tobacco Monopoly in Bourbon Mexico (Paperback)
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Bureaucrats, Planters, and Workers - The Making of the Tobacco Monopoly in Bourbon Mexico (Paperback)
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Honorable Mention, Bolton Memorial Prize, Conference on Latin
American History A government monopoly provides an excellent case
study of state-society relationships. This is especially true of
the tobacco monopoly in colonial Mexico, whose revenues in the
later half of the eighteenth century were second only to the silver
tithe as the most valuable source of government income. This
comprehensive study of the tobacco monopoly illuminates many of the
most important themes of eighteenth-century Mexican social and
economic history, from issues of economic growth and the supply of
agricultural credit to rural relations, labor markets, urban
protest and urban workers, class formation, work discipline, and
late colonial political culture. Drawing on exhaustive research of
previously unused archival sources, Susan Deans-Smith examines a
wide range of new questions. Who were the bureaucrats who managed
this colonial state enterprise and what policies did they adopt to
develop it? How profitable were the tobacco manufactories, and how
rational was their organization? What impact did the reorganization
of the tobacco trade have upon those people it affected most-the
tobacco planters and tobacco workers? This research uncovers much
that was not previously known about the Bourbon government's
management of the tobacco monopoly and the problems and limitations
it faced. Deans-Smith finds that there was as much continuity as
change after the monopoly's establishment, and that the popular
response was characterized by accommodation, as well as defiance
and resistance. She argues that the problems experienced by the
monopoly at the beginning of the nineteenth century did not
originate from any simmering, entrenched opposition. Rather, an
emphasis upon political stability and short-term profits prevented
any innovative reforms that might have improved the monopoly's
long-term performance and productivity. With detailed quantitative
data and rare material on the urban working poor of colonial
Mexico, Bureaucrats, Planters, and Workers will be important
reading for all students of social, economic, and labor history,
especially of Mexico and Latin America.
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