Abstract
The artificial sugar recovery policies had not been fully involved in the overproduction until very recently, despite the speech appear frequently in journals, agricultural congresses and conferences during the First Republic. The main Brazilian reference would be the European countries, although also returned his attention to artificial valuation policies set in motion by its neighboring countries, such as Argentina. This article is the analysis of the speeches that sometimes had the Argentine case as a model to be followed or something to be avoided. Examines the formation of a base of producers and technicians whose interest was not limited technological change, but encompassed about protectionist policies towards sugar in other countries.
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