Editing United Fruit Company
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In 1913 the company also created the Tropical Radio and Telegraph Company to keep in constant communication with its ships and plantations. Additionally, the Great White Fleet developed a refrigeration technology that facilitated the long-distance transportation of the fruit. Finally, United Fruit quickly eliminated its smaller competitors such as the Atlantic Fruit Company and Cuyamel Fruit Company. | In 1913 the company also created the Tropical Radio and Telegraph Company to keep in constant communication with its ships and plantations. Additionally, the Great White Fleet developed a refrigeration technology that facilitated the long-distance transportation of the fruit. Finally, United Fruit quickly eliminated its smaller competitors such as the Atlantic Fruit Company and Cuyamel Fruit Company. | ||
The company's expansion was facilitated by an environment friendly to foreign business in Central America. | The company's expansion was facilitated by an environment friendly to foreign business in Central America. Before World War II United Fruit counted on dictatorships that repressed labor unionism and gave generous concessions in terms of land grants and tax incentives. In some of the countries in which United Fruit operated it was the major employer and the largest investor in infrastructure, and it made possible the international marketing of the country's main export. Countries such as Guatemala, Panama, and Honduras depended on bananas for more than 60 percent of their total exports. Because of this, the local governments encouraged the company's operations in their national territories. | ||
The operations of United Fruit in Central America and the Caribbean have been highly controversial. The immense control the company had on these small republics' national economies, its labor conflicts in several countries, and its involvement in local politics (the company has been accused of conspiring against governments that were not on the company's side), have led many scholars and fiction writers, such as Gabriel García Márquez (b. 1928) and Miguel Angel Asturias (1899–1974), to portray United Fruit as the quintessential representative of U.S. imperialism in the region. A smaller and less influential group of scholars have tried to defend United Fruit's role in creating an export infrastructure and generating jobs in poor countries. | The operations of United Fruit in Central America and the Caribbean have been highly controversial. The immense control the company had on these small republics' national economies, its labor conflicts in several countries, and its involvement in local politics (the company has been accused of conspiring against governments that were not on the company's side), have led many scholars and fiction writers, such as Gabriel García Márquez (b. 1928) and Miguel Angel Asturias (1899–1974), to portray United Fruit as the quintessential representative of U.S. imperialism in the region. A smaller and less influential group of scholars have tried to defend United Fruit's role in creating an export infrastructure and generating jobs in poor countries. | ||
After World War II United Fruit faced serious threats that forced it to change its internal structure from a producing company to a marketing one. The rise of nationalistic governments and stronger labor unionism in Latin America made its investments in the region riskier. In 1954 Guatemalan president Jacobo Arbenz (1913–1971) attempted to expropriate some of the company's lands, the Honduran banana workers went on the biggest strike in the country's history, and the U.S. government sued the company for failing to comply with antitrust legislation. | |||
After World War II United Fruit faced serious threats that forced it to change its internal structure from a producing company to a marketing one. The rise of nationalistic governments and stronger labor unionism in Latin America made its investments in the region riskier. In 1954 Guatemalan president Jacobo Arbenz (1913–1971) attempted to expropriate some of the company's lands, the Honduran banana workers went on the biggest strike in the country's history, and the U.S. government sued the company for failing to comply with antitrust legislation | |||
These events made United Fruit's shareholders think that land ownership in Latin America increased the company's risks, so in the 1960s the company gradually got rid of its plantations and railroads and concentrated its efforts in the international marketing of bananas. | These events made United Fruit's shareholders think that land ownership in Latin America increased the company's risks, so in the 1960s the company gradually got rid of its plantations and railroads and concentrated its efforts in the international marketing of bananas. |