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Greece’s 19th Century Currant Crisis: A Warning Against ‘Temporary’ Government Support

by April 21, 2026
by April 21, 2026

In 1895, Greek journalist Vlasis Gavriilidis traveled to Cambridge University seeking advice from three leading economists — Alfred Marshall, Henry Sidgwick, and John Neville Keynes — on the most urgent economic problem facing his country: a collapsing market for currants (Corinthian raisins), which then accounted for roughly half of all Greek exports. 

Overproduction, fueled by earlier government policies and a temporary export boom, threatened widespread rural unemployment and poverty. The economists offered divided counsel. That ambiguity gave organized currant growers the opening they needed to lobby successfully for a price-support system — a “temporary” intervention that promised stable incomes for growers while shifting costs onto taxpayers and distorting the broader economy. 

The Greek currant crisis of the 1890s offers enduring lessons in policy hubris, the stubborn longevity of supposedly temporary measures, and the lasting damage caused by interfering with market incentives. 

Boom, Bust, and the Roots of Overproduction 

Currant cultivation in Greece had ancient roots, but the crisis was modern. French vineyards were devastated by the phylloxera pest in the 1860s and 1870s, creating massive demand for Greek currants to produce “raisin wine.” This surge encouraged rapid expansion. 

The First Agrarian Reform of 1871 had distributed national lands (former Ottoman holdings) in small plots to create a broad class of peasant proprietors. Many new landowners, often with credit secured against their holdings, rushed to plant currants — the most profitable crop at the time. Currants quickly became Greece’s dominant export. 

Then the boom reversed. French vineyards recovered. French producers, noting consumer preference for the taste and shelf-life of currant-based wine, successfully lobbied for the Méline Tariff of 1892 and the Turrell Act of 1896, which effectively shut Greek currants out of the French winemaking market. 

At the same time, high-quality, consistent California raisins entered global markets as strong competitors. The result was a sharp and sudden price collapse. As Patras merchant Theodoros Burmuli warned in 1899 in the Economic Journal, prices fell to the bare cost of production, threatening “disastrous and far-reaching consequences” for the Greek economy. 

The Retention Scheme and the Cambridge Debate 

Burmuli advocated a state retention system: exporters would be required to deliver 10–15 percent of their currants to a government depot (initially for supposed domestic use), artificially restricting supply to prop up prices and shield small growers from market reality. 

A group of anti-retentionists — largely free-trade liberals — opposed the plan. They argued it would distort markets, encourage even more overproduction, impose heavy administrative and fiscal costs, and fail to address the underlying imbalance between supply and demand. They also warned that any “temporary” program would prove difficult to end. 

The debate reached Cambridge in 1895. Sidgwick and John Neville Keynes leaned toward supporting the retention idea, with Keynes suggesting it “might prove temporarily effective” in easing growers’ distress. Alfred Marshall opposed it, though the exact record of his reasoning has not survived; his broader body of work aligns clearly with the anti-retentionist emphasis on allowing prices to adjust and resources to reallocate. 

The divided expert opinion helped the well-organized currant growers prevail politically. Greece enacted the retention law in 1895 as a supposedly short-term measure. 

What Actually Happened 

The results vindicated the critics. In his 1906 Economic Journal article “The Currant Crisis in Greece,” economist Andreas Andréadès documented how the program backfired. By guaranteeing inflated prices, it subsidized rather than discouraged production. Growers planted more vines, including on marginal land. Terraced hillsides and drained wetlands were converted to currants long after global demand had shifted. 

The measure was anything but temporary. Renewed annually at first, it was reorganized in 1899 as the “Currant Bank” and extended for another decade. Variants and references to retention schemes lingered into the early 1930s. 

The government accumulated debt and stockpiles of unsold currants. Andréadès concluded that the real crisis was no longer the initial overproduction but the intervention itself. By interfering with the law of supply and demand, policymakers turned a painful but localized adjustment into a prolonged national problem. He wrote: “Consequently, the only result [of the program] was to render permanent a crisis which could have been only temporary if the ‘economic laws’ had been respected.” 

Public Choice in Action 

Classic public-choice dynamics explain why the program persisted. As land values rose to capitalize on the artificial support, farmers came to depend on continuation of the policy. Any attempt to repeal it would impose visible, concentrated losses on a politically powerful group, while the costs (higher taxes, misallocated resources, and slower economic adjustment) were diffuse and borne by the broader economy and future generations. 

Greece’s heavy reliance on a single crop left the country economically fragile, and the fiscal burden of the scheme contributed to its chronic debt difficulties. 

Lessons for Today 

The nineteenth-century Greek currant saga remains highly relevant in an era of widespread agricultural subsidies, “temporary” assistance programs, and industry bailouts. 

Price signals matter. When demand falls or competition rises, the healthy response is reduced production and reallocation of resources — not government price floors that delay inevitable adjustments and lock capital and labor into unproductive uses. 

“Temporary” support rarely is. Programs sold as short-term relief tend to become entrenched when concentrated interest groups benefit and develop a stake in their continuation. 

Concentrated benefits, diffuse costs. Vocal, organized groups often succeed in capturing gains for themselves while spreading the bill across taxpayers and the wider economy — frequently at the expense of long-term growth and resilience. 

Greece’s currant crisis shows that good intentions and political expediency can transform a manageable market correction into decades of distortion. Policymakers tempted by price supports or industry rescues would do well to remember how a “temporary” Greek retention scheme outlived its justification by generations and left the economy weaker for it. 

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