Economic Theory and Impact of Industrialization. Social Impact Breakdown of traditional social...

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Economic Theory and Impact of Industrialization

Transcript of Economic Theory and Impact of Industrialization. Social Impact Breakdown of traditional social...

Economic Theory and Impact of Industrialization

Social Impact• Breakdown of traditional social structure

– Aristocracy• Wealth based primarily on land• Influence reduced by industrialization

– The Middle Class (bourgeoisie)• Benefitted the most• Factory owners, merchants, and bankers

– Upper middle» Government employees, doctors, lawyers, and managers of factories, mines, and shops

– Cotton Lords: Factory Owners– Lower middle

» Factory overseers» Skilled workers

– The Working Class (proletariat)• Badly treated; poor compensation

• Little improvement in living and working conditions• Work is replaced by machines

– The Luddites– Breakdown of traditional family

• Young people left constraints of villages and families• Increase in illegitimate births

Social Impact

• New factories – Required unskilled labor– Unemployment common

• People lost jobs and homes

– Low wages• Whole family had to

work– Long hours

• Late 1800s, early 1900s– Conditions improved

Social Impact• Population Growth

– Population tripled between 1750 and 1850• Result of declining death

rates• Growth of Cities

– Rapid urbanization (the building and movement of people to cities) caused problems• Poor housing• Lack of sewers and public

water supplies• Pollution • Disease such as cholera,

tuberculosis, and typhoid

Women and Industrialization

• Before the Industrial Revolution– Worked with men on the farm or family business

• Motherhood and homemaking not full-time pursuits

– Altered reality• Men were wage earners and women were homemakers

– Created a sharply defined domestic sphere for women

– Change took time• Working class families, all members had to work (early 1800s)• Before 1870 50% of textile industry is women

– Women made less money than men

• As salaries improved in industry and laws restricted the hours women could work more women stayed home

Women and Industrialization

• Around 1900– Rising standard of living– Mass consumer society emerges• Sewing machines, cast-iron stoves freed up time for

women of all classes

– Medical advances reduced infant mortality and the number of women who died in child birth

Economic Theory

• The Manchester School– Laissez-faire capitalism

• Adam Smith The Wealth of Nations– Natural law applied to the world of manufacturing and trade– Supply and demand– No government interference; invisible hand

• Thomas Malthus Essay on the Principle of Population– English clergyman

» Disturbed by population increase

• David Ricardo– Iron law of wages

Reforms• Early 1800s brought some changes and reforms

– Liberals• Tried to soften hard edge by agreeing to fairer labor laws and social

welfare measures• Initiated by Prime Minister Robert Peel (son of the cotton lord)

– Sensitive to needs of business and ideas of free trade» Restrictions and tariffs reduced; Non-Anglicans were allowed in civil and

military service; Catholics received equal rights; Parliament reduced the number of crimes punishable by death; Established professional police force (bobbies)

– Trade Unions (collective bargaining)• Illegal in the early 1800s• Earned legal status in late 1800s early 1900s

– Gained greater economic and political strength» The Labour Party in Britain

Reforms

• Working laws– 1833; Factory Act

• Limited the number of hours children under age nine could work

• Paid inspectors and procedures for enforcement

– 1842; Mines Act• Women, girls, and boys under 10 forbidden

to work in mines• Hurriers

– 1847; Ten Hours Act• Limited women and children to 10-hour

shifts– Poor laws

• Made unemployment unpleasant

Reforms

• Socialists– defined as a centrally planned economy in which the

government controls all means of production – Rejected capitalism and denied validity of private property• Economic competition is unfair and leads to injustice

and inequality

Reforms• Marxist socialism

– Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels• The Communist Manifesto (1848)• Das Kapital (1867-1894)

– Main argument• All history was driven by class struggle

– Upper class (controls capital, or the means of economic production)– Lower class (forced to labor for the upper class)

• Age of industrial capitalism– Struggle between bourgeoisie and proletariat– Final stage of human history before socialism– Move to communism

» Economic state of perfect justice, equality, and prosperity» Required revolution, advocated the overthrow of capitalism by

force is necessary

Industrialization Spreads

• Belgium 1831– Greatest industrialization on the continent

• Cottage industries; large population; ports for trade opened markets and provided profits

• Natural resources (coal)

• France– Industrialized slowly

• Coal deposits, but few iron ore deposits• Family agriculture• Investors were cautious; banks were not investment institutions• Railroads made improvements, but Chapelier law remained in

effect to 1864 forbidding strikes and unions

Industrialization Spreads

• Germany– Agricultural and disunited

• Slowly centers began to emerge– Ruhr Basin rich in both coal and iron ore

– The Zollverein (tariff union developed by Friedrich List)– Alfred Krupp steel works

• Eastern and Southern Europe– Little development– Lacked capital and a middle class– Governments were uninterested in encouraging manufacturing and

trade

Industrialization and Imperialism

• Intimately connected– Gave Western nations the ability to conquer and

colonize other parts of the world– Gave the West greater motivation• Raw materials• New markets

Industrial and Non-Industrial Nations

• Africa, Asia, and Latin America– Struck deals to exploit local resources– Monoculture

• Generally damages environment and slows the development of local diverse economies

• Exploits local workers

• Non-western nations eventually start to industrialize• Western colonizers see industrialization as a way to wealth

and power• Continues even today

Industrialization and Atlantic Slave Trade

• 1793 invention of cotton gin– Boosted England’s demand for raw cotton– Egypt was a large supplier, but also the American

south• Prolonged slavery