Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-hc48f Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-18T02:25:34.070Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Metropolitan Manila in the Great Depression: Crisis for Whom?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 March 2011

Get access

Extract

Despite its Importance, “the exact course and depth of the recession in the [Philippine] Islands have never been seriously studied” (Richardson 1984:208). Indeed, studies that attempt to calculate the impact of global trade cycles, including that of the Great Depression, on the employment economies of the primate cities of Southeast Asia form a special lacuna within the generally underdeveloped literature on the economic history of Southeast Asia. This article opens both research questions by presenting a time-specific assessment of the impact of this international business contraction on important segments of the economy and society of metropolitan Manila, the capital and major port-city of the Philippines. In particular, this article focuses on the depression experience of the large Filipino bureaucratic middle class, of Filipino manual workers in commodities handling, manufacturing, and construction, and finally of the Chinese commercial sector. The article provides a first-cut disaggregation and analysis of relevant statistical data—much of it assembled here for the first time, as well as commercial reports and the contemporary press. The result is a picture of selective dislocation and hardship but one that is at once more variegated and generally less severe than anticipated.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The Association for Asian Studies, Inc. 1991

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

List of References

Allen, James B. (Sol Auerbach). 1937. “Who Owns the Philippines?The Nation 144 (April 24):463–65.Google Scholar
American Chamber of Commerce Journal (ACCJ). 1933a. “Philippine Match Manufacturing Expands during Depression.” 12 (May):8.Google Scholar
American Chamber of Commerce Journal (ACCJ). 1933b. “Tondo: Red Cross Makes Social Survey There.” 13 (November): 19.Google Scholar
Annual Report of the Collector of Internal Revenue (ARCIR). Commonwealth of the Philippines.Google Scholar
Baker, Christopher. 1981. “Economic Reorganization and the Slump in South and Southeast Asia.” Comparative Studies in Society and History 23:325–49.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Birnberg, Thomas B. and Resnick, Steven A.. 1975. Colonial Development: An Econometric Study. New Haven: Yale University, Economic Growth Center.Google Scholar
Brown, Ian. 1986. “Rural Distress in Southeast Asia during the World Depression of the Early 1930s; A Preliminary Reexamination.” Journal of Asian Studies 45 (November): 9951026.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brown, Ian., ed. 1989. The Economies of Africa and Asia in the Inter-War Depression. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Bulletin of Philippine Statistics (Bps).Google Scholar
Carpio, Jose A. 1931. “The Philippine Motion-Picture Industry.” Commerce and Industry Journal 7 (October):6.Google Scholar
Celeste, Jose L. 1936. “The Pension Funds.” National Review (January 31 and April 3).Google Scholar
Commerce Reports (CR). Compiled from field staff reports by the U.S. Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce.Google Scholar
Commerce Yearbook. U.S. Department of Commerce.Google Scholar
Confesor, Tomas. 1934. Essays in The Critic 1 (October-December).Google Scholar
Cornejo's Commonwealth Directory of the Philippines (Cornejo). 1939. Manila: Cornejo Publishing Co.Google Scholar
Dick, Howard. 1989. “Japan's Economic Expansion in the Netherlands Indies Between the First and Second World Wars.” Journal of Southeast Asian Studies 20 (September):244–72.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Department of State, United States. 1938. Joint Preparatory Committee on Philippine Affairs, Report of May 20, 1938. Conference Series No. 36.Google Scholar
Doeppers, Daniel F. 1981. “Construction Cycles in Pre-war Manila.” Philippine Economic Journal 20:4457.Google Scholar
Doeppers, Daniel F. 1983a. “Financing Urban Construction in the Philippines, 1900–1941: The Rise of Mutual Building and Loan Associations.” Crossroads 1:2948.Google Scholar
Doeppers, Daniel F. 1983b. “Mortgage Loans and Lending Institutions in Pre-war Manila.” Philippine Studies 31 (2nd Qtr.): 189215.Google Scholar
Doeppers, Daniel F. 1984. Manila, 1900–1941: Social Change in a Late Colonial Metropolis. New Haven and Manila: Yale University Southeast Asian Studies Monograph and Ateneo de Manila University Press.Google Scholar
Foreign Commerce Weekly (Fcw). U.S. Department of Foreign and Domestic Commerce.Google Scholar
Friend, Theodore. 1963. “The Philippine Sugar Industry and the Politics of Independence, 1929–1935.” Journal of Asian Studies 22:179–92.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Friend, Theodore. 1969. Between Two Empires. Manila: Solidaridad Publishing House.Google Scholar
Gallego, Manuel V. 1937. “Problems of the Philippine Cigarette Industry.” PJC (January):1516.Google Scholar
Gutierrez, Mariano E. 1952. “The Tobacco Industry in Transition.” In A Half-Century of Philippine Agriculture, pp. 202–13. Manila: Bureau of Agriculture.Google Scholar
Harrington, Thomas. 1930. Economic Conditions in the Philippine Islands, 1927–1930. U.K. Department of Overseas Trade.Google Scholar
Hester, E. D. 1931. “Annual Review of Trade 1930.” In Rosenstock's, p. 10.Google Scholar
Historical Statistics of the United States, Colonial Times to 1970 (Historical Statistics). 1975. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Department of Commerce.Google Scholar
Honig, Emily. 1986. Sisters and Strangers: Women in the Shanghai Cotton Mills, 1919–1949. Stanford: Stanford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Industry and Machinery Journal (Imj).Google Scholar
Ingleson, John. 1988. “Urban Java during the Depression.” Journal of Southeast Asian Studies 19 (September):292309.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
International Reference Service (Irs). 1941. U.S. Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce.Google Scholar
Kerkvliet, Melinda Tria. 1989. “Manila Workers' Unions, 1900–1950.” Ph.D. diss., University of Hawaii.Google Scholar
Manila City Directory (MCD). Annual. Manila: Philippine Education Company.Google Scholar
McCoy, Alfred W. 1984. “The Iloilo General Strike: Defeat of the Proletariate in a Philippine City.” Journal of Southeast Asian Studies 15 (September): 330–64.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McCoy, Alfred W. 1982. “A Queen Dies Slowly: The Rise and Decline of Iloilo City.” In McCoy, A. W. and de Jesus, E., eds., Philippine Social History: Global Trade and Local Transformations, pp. 297358. Manila and Honolulu: Ateneo de Manila University Press and University of Hawaii Press.Google Scholar
Netzorg, Morton. 1981. “A View from the Pasig.” Bulletin of the American Historical Collection 9 (January):730.Google Scholar
O'Brien, Anthony. 1988. “Prosperity and Depression, 1893–1933.” Journal of Economic History 48 (June):415–16.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Owen, Norman G. 1989. “Subsistence in the Slump, Agricultural Adjustment in the Provincial Philippines.” In Brown, Ian, ed. 1989. Read in mss.Google Scholar
Philippine Journal of Commerce (PJC). 1935. “La Yebana.” (January): 1011.Google Scholar
Philippine Journal of Commerce (PJC). 1939. “Review of Business.” (January):33.Google Scholar
Philippine Statistical Review (PSR).Google Scholar
Philippines Free Press (PFP). Weekly.Google Scholar
Report of the General Manager, Philippine Islands, Manila Railroad Co. (Rgm). Annual.Google Scholar
Richards, J. Bartlett. 1935. “Philippine Trade and Economic Conditions in 1934.” In MCD, 1935–36:7Google Scholar
Richardson, James A. 1984. “The Genesis ofthe Philippine Communist Party.” Ph.D. diss., School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London.Google Scholar
Rosenstock's Manila City Directory, 1931–32 (Rosenstock's). 1931. Manila: Philippine Education Co.Google Scholar
Scott, James C. 1976. The Moral Economy of the Peasant. New Haven: Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Stanley, Peter W. 1974. A Nation in the Making. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Statistical Bulletin of the Philippine Islands (SBPI).Google Scholar
Stoler, Ann Laura. 1985. Capitalism and Confrontation in Sumatra's Plantation Belt, 1870–1979. New Haven: Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Tan, Antonio S. 1972. The Chinese in the Philippines, 1898–1935. Quezon City: R. P. Garcia Publishing Co.Google Scholar
Temin, Peter. 1976. Did Monetary Forces Cause the Great Depression? New York: W. W. Norton and Co., Inc.Google Scholar
Temin, Peter. 1990. “Socialism and Wages in the Recovery from the Great Depression in the United States and Germany.” Journal of Economic History 50 (June): 297307.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Yearbook of Philippine Statistics (Yearbook). Annual. Commonwealth of the Philippines, Bureau of Census and Statistics.Google Scholar