Land reform and agrarian socialism in interwar Europe: Evidence from 1930s Spain before civil war
Articles
Overview
published in
- EXPLORATIONS IN ECONOMIC HISTORY Journal
publication date
- August 2024
start page
- 1
end page
- 20
issue
- 94
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)
full text
International Standard Serial Number (ISSN)
- 0014-4983
Electronic International Standard Serial Number (EISSN)
- 1090-2457
abstract
- This paper studies the effects of various types of land reform on the voting of the rural poor in a developing, largely agrarian economy such as 1930s Spain. Using municipal-level electoral results in a region with intense but heterogeneous land-related interventions, we find that permanent transfers of land had the greatest positive impact on voting for leftist candidates, followed by temporary transfers of land aimed at alleviating the problem of seasonal unemployment. Poorly planned temporary transfers of land without adequate funding for beneficiaries made the landless more vulnerable to landowner control and had the opposite result. Our results show that the secret ballot might be insufficient to guarantee the free vote of economically dependent landless laborers. They also show that land reforms with poor support for beneficiaries might backfire.