Colonial goods

In economics, colonial goods are goods imported from European colonies, in particular coffee, tea, spices, rice, sugar, cocoa and chocolate, and tobacco.[1][2]

At a time when food and agriculture represented a relatively large proportion of overall economic activity, economic statistics often divided traded goods between "Colonial goods", "Domestic (agricultural & extractive sectors) production" and "Manufactured (secondary sector) production".

The term "colonial goods" became less appropriate with the collapse of the western European empires that followed the Second World War. It nevertheless still appeared in books and articles in the 1970s, by now covering not merely agricultural output from (formerly) colonial countries but all long-life staple foods, regardless of provenance, as well as soap, washing powder and petrol/gasoline, and other newly important basic household supplies.[3]

Colonial goods stores

Colonial goods stores were retailers specializing in colonial goods. The name is now used generically for grocery stores selling non-perishable items.

Notes

  1. i.A. Hersteller: Julius Meinl, Vienna. "Kolonialwaren (Kaffee, Tee, Kakao), 1. Hälfte 20. Jh". Technischen Museum Wien. Retrieved 1 January 2015.
  2. "Aroma vom Paradies". Der Spiegel. 7 April 1980. Retrieved 1 January 2015.
  3. "EUROPAS BROT-UND-BUTTER-PLAN SPIEGEL-Gespräch mit dem Vizepräsidenten der EWG-Kommission, Dr. h. c. Mansholt". Der Spiegel (online). 1 June 1960. Retrieved 1 January 2015.
gollark: Labels are 32 characters. Only 187 characters are allowed but with some finicky encoding this works out as ~30 bytes.
gollark: Computers can read the labels of networked computers.
gollark: This is between adjacent devices. For wireless just use modems.
gollark: You're just not thinking with insanity enough.
gollark: It changes the computer's label very fast.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.