4.2 Article

Famine in Spain During Franco's Dictatorship, 1939-52

Journal

JOURNAL OF CONTEMPORARY HISTORY
Volume 56, Issue 1, Pages 3-27

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
DOI: 10.1177/0022009419876004

Keywords

Autarky; diseases; famine; Francoism; Spain; starvation

Categories

Funding

  1. Spanish Ministry of Economy, Industry and Competitiveness

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The article highlights how the economic policies of the Franco dictatorship led to famine in postwar Spain. The country experienced an extreme socio-economic crisis in the 1940s, with true famine only occurring in late 1939 and 1942, as well as 1946.
In the aftermath of civil war, Spain witnessed a period known as the 'Years of Hunger', which would extend throughout the postwar years (1939-52). The dictatorship would lay the blame on external factors, although the causes for the collapse of living conditions and food supply over that time lay in its autarkic policies. This article attempts to show that Spain was victim of a famine as a consequence of the economic policies of the Franco dictatorship. To analyse the Spanish case, we rely on the conceptual framework of famine studies throughout history. We will demonstrate that Spain suffered an extreme socio-economic crisis during the 1940s, but that it was not until late 1939 and 1942, as well as 1946, that a true famine took place. In order to characterise and explain it, we will analyse three different aspects: the rise in the cost of living, the spread of infectious diseases and death by starvation.

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