Predecessors Coffee production helped recover Minas Gerais' public finances, which had been in decline since the end of the
gold cycle. In 1818/19, coffee represented only 3% of Minas Gerais exports. In the 1850s, it was already the main export product, and the tax from coffee represented 49% of the total exported. In the 1885/89 period, this tax percentage rose to 80%. Minas Gerais became the second-largest coffee producer in the country from the last decade of the
Empire until 1930. In the 19th century, labor on the coffee plantations was heavily based on slavery. However, in the second half of the century, slavery entered a gradual process of decline. In 1850, the Brazilian Parliament abolished the slave trade, through the
Eusébio de Queirós Law. In 1888, the
Golden Law was passed, which definitively abolished slavery on Brazilian territory. With the abolition of slavery, there was a great exodus of former slaves. On most of the farms, the former slaves refused to continue in their jobs. According to
Emília Viotti da Costa, for the freedmen, freedom consisted "above all, in the right to leave, to move freely, to leave the plantation, to work where, how and when they wanted". The province and later the state of Minas Gerais had the largest population in Brazil and supposedly had enough labor force to substitute the former slaves. With the end of slavery, coffee growers could no longer force people to work for them; they would have to offer minimally advantageous conditions to attract free workers. However, the work conditions on the coffee plantations, in general, were terrible: one worked hard and earned little, and sometimes was treated badly by the farmer or their henchmen. Vestiges of slavery still existed. The conditions on the coffee farms in Minas Gerais were even worse than those in São Paulo since the latter provided better salaries, as well as guarantees through contracts or partnership agreements. Contrary to what happened in São Paulo, where immigrants, after 1886, were the main labor force in the coffee plantations, in Minas Gerais the Brazilian workers were the ones who sustained the coffee production, despite being labeled as "lazy" by the farmers. The "instability" attributed to the Brazilian worker, however, was not greater than that found in the European worker. Proof of this is that in São Paulo, the behavior of the European worker also generated general crises in the plantation. The Europeans were resistant to submit to the terrible work conditions offered by the coffee growers and reacted through strikes and other manifestations, besides being able to count on the consulate's help. For the Brazilian worker, the only form of defense was to abandon the farm and move to another one. The problem, then, was not in the "Brazilian worker," but in the terrible work conditions offered. Among the reasons why the Minas Gerais government encouraged immigration, especially Italian immigration, were: • Although Minas Gerais had the largest free population in Brazil, which could, in theory, make up for the labor shortage with the abolition of slavery, the population of Minas Gerais was relatively sparse. As a result, many free workers could count on relatively abundant land to develop subsistence agriculture, without having to work for the large landowners to survive. • In Brazilian culture, manual labor was despised and seen as "slave labor". Many free Brazilians or former slaves refused to work as wage earners on the coffee plantations, as this caused prejudice. • The Minas Gerais government saw immigration not only as a solution to the labor problem in coffee but also as a means to develop local agriculture, due to the unfamiliarity or resistance of Brazilians to use more efficient land exploitation techniques. Many of the Italian immigrants in Minas Gerais were farmers from Northern Italy with great experience in land management, a strategic resource that helped modernize the state's economy. • The neighboring state of São Paulo was growing rich thanks to coffee exports largely based on Italian labor. The Minas Gerais government, then, used the same strategy. However, there were several factors that limited immigration to Minas Gerais: • The government did not have the same financial resources to subsidize the transportation of the immigrants, as the São Paulo government did. Subsidized immigration in Minas Gerais lasted around ten years, from 1888 to 1898, due to a financial crisis. • The immigration policy in Minas Gerais was quite decentralized, delegating to the municipal councils the initiative to promote immigration, but few were interested in doing it. • During the
First Brazilian Republic, the Minas Gerais economy was not very dynamic, with coffee as the only product valued by the government. There were few job opportunities in other areas, making the state unattractive to immigrants. Although it was the most populous state in the country, in 1907, of the 2,938 industries existing in Brazil, 17% were in Minas Gerais, a rate that worsened in 1920: of the 13,336 industries, only 9.3% were in the state, behind São Paulo (31%), Rio Grande do Sul (13%) and the Federal District (
Rio de Janeiro) (12%).
The ideal immigrant In 1892, aiming to know the reality of farming, the Minas Gerais government sent a questionnaire to the municipal councils, the district councils, and several landowners. It contained questions about several aspects of the Minas Gerais economy. In the question about which nationality of workers they preferred, the one that received the most votes was Chinese. The Chinese had a great reputation as workers and were "less demanding" of their rights, being much more submissive than the Europeans, who were already enlightened and, consequently, demanding. In 1894, the City Council of
São João Nepomuceno managed to get subsidies from the state for the transportation of Chinese immigrants. However, the Brazilian government made it difficult for them to enter the country, since only European immigrants were entitled to subsidized transportation. Finally, the difficulties in diplomatic relations between Brazil and China and the break of the
war against Japan buried the attempts to attract the Chinese. The second most popular nationality in the survey was Portuguese. In 1896, a tax agency, subordinate to the Superintendence, was installed in
Lisbon, in charge of advertising and attracting
Portuguese immigrants to Minas Gerais. However, the Portuguese government hindered the agency's activities, as it was unable to lower the price of ship tickets. As a result, Portuguese immigration to Minas Gerais in this period was inexpressive. The third most popular nationality was Brazilian. The
Spanish, despite being the second most important group in numbers in the state in the context of subsidized immigration, after the Italians, also never arrived in large numbers. The Minas Gerais landowner had no interest in the Spanish immigrant, as the latter was considered too aggressive and demanding. In 1896, the Superintendence contacted the Consul General of Brazil in
Stockholm, wishing to attract immigrants from Sweden. However, Swedish laws imposed heavy burdens on emigration agents and the project was abandoned. In 1897, as an experiment, Minas Gerais brought 173 immigrants from
Austria. However, the Austrians were too demanding, rejecting wage labor in the coffee plantations and demanding placement in colonial centers. As a result, the Superintendence suspended immigration from that country. German immigration, on the other hand, was accepted and looked upon favorably by the miners. However, German legislation was very strict and did not allow open propaganda in favor of emigration in their territory. This hampered any attempt to attract immigrants from Germany. As a result, the only group that immigrated
en masse to Minas Gerais in the last quarter of the 19th century was the Italian. They adapted relatively well to the customs of Brazil, were considered excellent workers, and got used with some ease to the system of partnership or sharecropping. Influenced by São Paulo, where the labor in farming, almost exclusively from Italy, bore good fruit, it also fell to the Italian the choice of Minas Gerais, especially the immigrant from Northern Italy. == Poorly stimulated immigration ==