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Abstract / Description of output
The article addresses how merchants and wine producers interacted while oscillating between competition and collaboration in their internal relations. Spanning a period of more than a century, it addresses three chronological periods: 1900–1940, 1940–1994, and 1994 to the present. In the first, producers were able to forge a common front against the merchants in the shape of the Kooperatieve ̈ Wynbouwers Vereniging van Suid-Afrika, which was granted devolved regulatory powers over distilling wine in 1924 and then all wine in 1940. In the second, the antagonism between good and distilling producers was sublimated at a time of relative prosperity, while the merchants engaged in fierce competition. In the final phase, the regulatory system imploded while the export market re-emerged. Quality producers found common ground in appealing to terroir, whereas marginal producers supplied merchants and supermarkets with low-priced bulk wines.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 332-340 |
Journal | Journal of Wine Economics |
Volume | 18 |
Issue number | 4 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 8 Jan 2024 |
Keywords / Materials (for Non-textual outputs)
- South Africa
- wine
- regulation
- collective action
- terroir
- competition
- co-operation
- merchants
- wine farmers
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