Banana war

Équivalents : Guerra del banano
Guerre de la banane
Domaine : Transnational corporation

Définition

Trade dispute over banana.

Description

Commercial interests in cash crops can also give rise to international disputes. This was the case in 1934, when the United States sent troops into banana-producing countries in Latin America; this incident led to the creation of the term banana war. Later, the term was expanded to apply to conflicts based on economic, rather than military, measures.

"It started with bananas in Europe. After World War II, the continent's banana market divided into two kinds. Such countries as Britain, France and Spain limited imports and gave preferential treatment to bananas grown in their former colonies. Thus Britain encouraged banana output in Jamaica, Dominica, St. Lucia; France extended special treatment to bananas grown in the Ivory Coast and the Cameroons. At the other extreme, Germany offered a free market with no import restrictions or tariffs.

Britain and France took the position that banana production was essential for both the economic health and the social well being of their former colonies. By the late 1980s, about one-third of the work forces on the small island nations were employed in banana production.

Protected banana production, that is. Most of the bananas were grown on small family farms and tilled by hand on hilly terrain and poor soil, with little or no mechanization or irrigation. Yields were far below those in places like Honduras, Guatemala and Ecuador. In fact, the cost of growing bananas in the Caribbean was twice that for bananas produced on Latin American plantations. Without their favorable entree to Europe, the banana industries of these small islands might have disappeared.

Thus, in a tariff-free and quota-free Germany, Chiquita had seized 45% of the market. Envisioning the same potential for all of Europe, as well as the former Soviet satellites that were opening up, Chiquita and its chief competitor, Dole Food, decided in the early 1990s to pour more money into production and flood the European market with bananas. With more bananas than buyers, prices--and hence profits--plummeted."
(Duke University, How did the Banana War Start?, 2002-08, visited 2009-01-2009)

Relations sémantiques

Associatives

CASH CROP
© Jeanne Dancette