English edit

Etymology edit

commodity +‎ -ism

Noun edit

commodityism (uncountable)

  1. The adoption of special legislation for specific commodities such as cotton or tobacco.
    • 1948, United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Agriculture and Forestry, Long-range Agricultural Policy and Program, volumes 1-2, page 353:
      I do not want to raise the question of sectionalism or commodityism in this committee, but I am afraid the soundness of these loans to our basic commodities is becoming in ill repute in some sections of the country because of their use.
    • 1959, Roland Eugene Richter, The American Farm Bureau and the New Deal, page 35:
      "Commodityism" was not eradicated by any single measure of the Farm Bureau in the thirties. It continued as a recurrent problem.