The chronic food deficit of early modern Portugal : curse or myth?


Autoria(s): Costa, Leonor Freire; Reis, Jaime
Data(s)

09/06/2016

09/06/2016

2016

Resumo

Two historiographical currents have debated whether early modern Portugal was cursed by an excessive dependence on foreign food imports as a result of being unable to feed its population, or not. In this short paper, the first long-run systematic quantitative study of this question, we show that the former view is a myth and therefore could not be a curse. Throughout the entire period, a certain amount of grain was in fact imported but cereal purchases abroad never represented more than a diminutive percentage of total food consumption. More importantly, the country carried out a diversified trade in foodstuffs which was seldom seriously out of balance. Portuguese agriculture showed itself consistently capable of specializing in different foodstuffs for export. It was thus not hopelessly inefficient and succeeded reasonably well in meeting the basic nutritional needs of the population.

Identificador

Costa, L. F. & Reis, J. (2016). The chronic food deficit of early modern Portugal: curse or myth? (GHES. Documentos de Trabalho/ Working papers series, DT/WP 58). Lisboa: Instituto Superior de Economia e Gestão, Universidade de Lisboa

2183-1785

http://hdl.handle.net/10451/24022

Idioma(s)

por

Publicador

Instituto Superior de Economia e Gestão, Universidade de Lisboa

Relação

GHES Documento de Trabalho/Working Paper;58 - 2016

Direitos

openAccess

Palavras-Chave #Food deficit #Agriculture #Foreign trade
Tipo

workingPaper