Accommodating Agriculture within US Capitalism: Cotton, Cooperatives, and Intermediate Credit in the Early Twentieth Century

Jamieson Gordon Myles

Business History Review2026https://doi.org/10.1017/s0007680525101359article
AJG 4ABDC A
Weight
0.37

Abstract

Focusing on cooperative marketing associations (CMAs) in the raw cotton sector, this article asks how the federal government got involved in providing intermediate credit to farmer cooperatives. Around the turn of the twentieth century, farmers and financiers shared some key financial reform objectives, but it was only during and after World War I that the federal state began supporting CMAs’ access to credit through the Federal Reserve and War Finance Corporation. Key public and private actors appropriated decades-old Populist claims about cooperatives’ macroeconomic benefits to justify top-down efforts to support their development. Cotton played a central role in these institutional reforms designed to neutralize the danger that commodity markets and agrarian politics posed to US capitalism through centralized mechanisms of monetary and credit control. But even the creation of the Federal Intermediate Credit Banks in 1923 failed to provide CMAs with the generic working capital necessary to coordinate both production and distribution. Instead, federal policies focused on trade financing in the name of good financial practices and therefore patently ignored Southern Populists’ progressive dream of eliminating the crop-lien system.

1 citation

Open via your library →

Cite this paper

https://doi.org/https://doi.org/10.1017/s0007680525101359

Or copy a formatted citation

@article{jamieson2026,
  title        = {{Accommodating Agriculture within US Capitalism: Cotton, Cooperatives, and Intermediate Credit in the Early Twentieth Century}},
  author       = {Jamieson Gordon Myles},
  journal      = {Business History Review},
  year         = {2026},
  doi          = {https://doi.org/https://doi.org/10.1017/s0007680525101359},
}

Paste directly into BibTeX, Zotero, or your reference manager.

Flag this paper

Accommodating Agriculture within US Capitalism: Cotton, Cooperatives, and Intermediate Credit in the Early Twentieth Century

Flags are reviewed by the Arbiter methodology team within 5 business days.


Evidence weight

0.37

Balanced mode · F 0.40 / M 0.15 / V 0.05 / R 0.40

F · citation impact0.16 × 0.4 = 0.06
M · momentum0.53 × 0.15 = 0.08
V · venue signal0.50 × 0.05 = 0.03
R · text relevance †0.50 × 0.4 = 0.20

† Text relevance is estimated at 0.50 on the detail page — for your query’s actual relevance score, open this paper from a search result.