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The industrial revolution

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Title: The industrial revolution


1
The industrial revolution
2
The English industrial revolution a radical
turn in human history ?
  • Industrial revolution termed from the word used
    for political revolutions, mostly (then) the
    French one.
  • Traditionally IR is characterized as
  • Rapid, brutal, economic (from malthusian world to
    permanent growth) and social change (urbanization
    reached 50 in 1851 in England).
  • Centered on manufacturing industries
  • Todays debate about
  • Rupture or continuity ? (rapid or slow change ?)
  • Innovation or work intensification ?

3
Rupture or continuity ?
  • Traditional quantitative view (Deane Cole) was
  • No sustained growth in GDP per capita before 1760
    (malthusian trap)
  • IR a sudden and permanent rise in TFP allows a
    rise in population without decrease in income.
  • Great divergence with non-european economies
  • New view (Crafts).
  • The traditional views did as if other industries
    were as successful as the cotton and iron ones,
    the only studied in detail.
  • Growth concentrated in cotton and iron and steel.
    But these sectors represent only 25 of
    industrial workers in 1840 (at the end of the
    IR). Cotton alone only 8 (but 50 of steam
    power).
  • In 1851, the majority of industrial workers are
    in workshops, not in factories blacksmith are
    more numerous than all other workers in metal
    industries shoemakers more numerous than miners
    (274000 vs 219000).
  • Even in textiles, cotton is the major innovative
    industry, but wool remains dominant up to the
    1820s. Wool, silk, flax also develop in the 18th
    c.

4
  • Distribution of textile production (by value of
    raw materials used, millions )                
           cotton     wool      flax         
    silk around 1700       1,14       
    40              6,3          0,5        
    1772       4,2          85           
    12,5         0,95          1800     
    41,8         98            15,2         1,2
  • New GDP calculations
  • Compared to Feinstein 1801-1830 growth rate
    reduced from 2.7 to 1.9 per year TFP from 1.3
    to 0.35.
  • Compared to Deane Cole or Hoffman, 1.81/an for
    1780-1800 instead of 3.43, but 1.05 for
    1760-1780 instead of 0.49 smoother growth no
    IR.
  • Growth accounting
  • Growth either capital accumulation or
    efficiency
  • Capital deepening much discussed (below)
  • Human capital as a substitute (complement ?)
  • Crafts suggests the Solow residual to be a minor
    problem (especially with the augmented model).
    Others find it dominant.

5
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6
Crafts, 1995
7
Critiques of growth accounting / new view
(Hoppit, Berg Hudson)
  • Change differs from growth macro view does not
    help to understand what happened. Rapid radical
    changes
  • In labor organization within and outside
    factories
  • Women and child labor replaced male labor in
    growing industries (textiles, metalware,
    potteries)
  • This led to wide male unemployment, or
    underemployment in traditional industries
    (building, leather)
  • Regional specialization strongly affected
  • Variety of industries mechanized without growth
    (paper, soap, candles), or growing without
    mechanization (coal, construction)
  • Interaction among industries cotton could not
    develop without others (industrial system).
  • Radical innovations affect growth late, but
    change society (electricity, computers, same for
    cotton and iron).
  • Quality changes in products are badly measured.

8
  • Index number problems
  • Weighting of cotton industry difficult. Has major
    impact because of the rapid growth in its
    productivity (graph). Different authors use
    weights from 4 to 20 of industrial value added
    around 1800.
  • Neglects many small manufacturing industries and
    the services
  • Neglects women and child labor which was not
    measured in contemporary statistics
  • Forgotten hypotheses the growth models used
    suppose perfect mobility, full-employment,
    perfect competition, neutral technological
    progress, constant returns to scale, etc.
    Structural change and reallocation of factors can
    decrease productivity in the short term (what is
    short term ?), making major changes invisible in
    growth measures.
  • Problems with sources
  • Excise and customs records as basic sources.
  • Evasion, corruption of officials may vary through
    time and industries.
  • Non-excised industries. Activities which left no
    quantitative traces.

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10
Total factor productivity, England, 1600-1870
(Clark)
11
Some conclusions on the debate
  • The weight of the cotton industry is the major
    issue in the calculation of industrial growth,
    because of its size and growth.
  • In most industries, the rise in productivity
    reduces the relative price of the product it
    affects global TFP only if its share in
    production is large, or if the price elasticity
    of the demand for its product is high enough for
    the production to rise a lot more so if foreign
    demand is also high and elastic.
  • Measures of agricultural and service productivity
    are even more fragile. Both output and employment
    are largely based on population figures.
  • Given the limitations in sources (bad in
    England), Crafts calculations are quite good.
  • But do they say much about the I.R. ? Or more a
    necessary exercise in consistency ?

12
A solution ? two views of the IR (Temin)
  • Simplifies the debate in  technological  and
     macroeconomic  views
  • Broad technological and entrepreneurial change in
    all activities (Landes, Ashton, Berg, Hudson,
    etc).
  • Vs Crafts-Harleys view of growth concentrated in
    a few industries (coal, iron, and cotton).
  • Deducting their (weighted) growth rates from the
    one for the total economy leaves nothing (table).
  • But no data available allows an actual measure
    of growth in these industries.

13
Temin, p. 65
14
Comparative advantage theory
  • Rapid productivity growth in agriculture, cotton
    and iron, and slow growth in most other
    industries should make Britain specialize in the
    first group. Actually true around 1750 (exports
    of wheat) not afterwards.
  • Uses a Ricardian model only one factor, labor.
  • Permits ranking all goods as more or less
    exportable, the frontier between actual exports
    and imports being determined through general
    equilibrium constraints.

15
Test of the model using trade data
  • Table 2 shows a steady increase in the share of
    cotton (not iron) in exports the absence of
    agriculture the importance (although decreasing)
    of other manufactures.
  • This is not intra-industry trade, since imports
    of manufactures differ from exports, and exports
    of most industries grew at similar paces.
  • This suggests productivity grew in many
    industries IR was more than a cotton revolution.
  • Confirmed by the decline of British terms of
    trade.

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Some limitations
  • Other explanations are not much discussed
  • decline in the prices of tropical products
    (thanks to transport cost and colonization) makes
    them natural foreign specialization, and explains
    an increase in  other manufacturing  exports.
  • Decreasing returns in British agriculture
    (finished supply of land) makes imports more
    necessary when population and income increase.
  • Productivity growth in manufactures outside
    Britain is supposed to be zero. Problem if
    differs among industries
  • Protection.
  • Part of these limitations are discussed in the
    answer by Harley Crafts, 2000 CGE model of the
    period the apex of sophisticated techniques on
    fragile data.

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The Classical paradox of the IR gdp/c growth
and wages stagnation
  • Increasing output per capita despite growing
    population the great success of the IR.
  • But huge contemporary literature insisting on
    increasingly intensive work and decreasing wages
    and standard of living among the poor
    (exploitation).
  • Ricardo, Marx, J. Hicks... and R. Allen argue
    that
  • Technology decreases the price of fixed assets
  • So capital was transferred from circulating
    capital (wages and raw materials) to fixed
    assets this produced a transfer from wages to
    profits because of reduced demand for labor and
    then increased unemployment.
  • This was observed in textiles (in spinning in
    the18th c., in weaving in the early 19th).
  • And associated with a loss in the human capital
    of former skilled workers.

20
  • Testing for this requires measuring real wages
    among industries which is difficult
  • IR transformation of the definition of wage
    (long includes assistants wages, tools), of the
    skills required, of industries, of people
    employed (men vs women and children) enormous
    differences of wage among workers (gender, age,
    skills as determinant)
  • Major changes in the price of some goods (eg
    textiles, heating) entering in the poors
    consumption.
  • Large differences between regions (wages increase
    in northern England during IR where the coal is
    located).
  • Endogenous technology (invention of self acting
    mule in order to employ skilled men whose work
    was done by women using standard mules (or,
    earlier, the jenny). Other technologies developed
    in order to employ women and children, with much
    lower wages.
  • Todays consensus
  • decreasing weekly wages in 18th c., slight
    increase up to 1850.
  • Worse if unemployment taken into account.
  • Then do not compensate for urban disamenities
    (housing, health)
  • Confirmed by declining heights among the poor.

21
Feinstein vs Lindert estimates for weekly real
earnings (discrepancies mostly from price index)
22
Engels pause (Allen)
23
Historical profit rates
24
Historical factor shares
25
Institutional dimensions of labors repression
the enclosures, Speenhamland, ID
  • Enclosures
  • A huge literature stimulated by K. Marx
    emphasizes the role of the enclosure movement in
    throwing poor peasants from the countryside in
    the late 17th and early 18th c. (large proportion
    of lands in England affected).
  • Actually, enclosure bills enacted by Parliament
    when demanded by local elites (landlords
    support from farmers).
  • Enclosures allowed substantial increase in
    productivity both by reallocating land to more
    productive uses (commons), changing incentives
    (improved property rights), increasing returns
    per acre (agricultural revolution) and decreasing
    the agricultural workforce.

26
Speenhamland
  • Poor laws organizing local (parochial) support
    for the poor have been much more important and
    enforced in England (since the late Middle Ages)
    than in other countries. The study of their
    economic and social impact has been highly
    controversial.
  • System deemed inefficient by Classical economists
    because of implicit high marginal taxation of the
    poors marginal income.
  • Abolished in the 1834 in favor of workhouses (see
    Dickens)
  • Polanyi (1945) liberalization of the labor
    market (as opposed to local communities of
    earlier periods).
  • In fact, even from a purely economic point of
    view, the poor laws were not so costly since
    actual practice allowed for some incentives to
    work (paying childrens allowances independently
    from the fathers income), restricted or
    organized migrations when necessary.
  • Actually not suppressed by local landholders (who
    paid for it) but by manufacturers (who needed
    migrants towards their factories).
  • Conclusion like enclosures a century earlier,
    accelerated the creation of a national market for
    labor, and maybe decreased hourly wages and
    intensified labor.

27
Industrious revolution (de Vries)
  • Synthesis proposed in order to integrate in a
    common framework various stylized facts
  • Stagnation of real wages
  • Increase in consumption (material life history
    probate inventories) of a substantial fraction
    of the population.
  • Stagnation in schooling
  • Increase in population
  • Increase in women and children work, with
    negative impact on urban schooling
  • Cultural change on the demand side ( slaves to
    their own wants  Steuart Mandeville on moral
    values).
  • Hypothesis
  • All these changes are part of a single, major
    shift the industrious revolution, which lasted
    from 1700 to 1850.
  • They can be understood in a framework of a
    representative family optimizing behavior.

28
  • Main argument the increase in the intensity of
    labor by the family is voluntary (a labor-supply
    change) decided at the family level (family as
    a firm organization and power can vary through
    time, class and space. They are affected by the
    integration to the labor market).
  • It results from the desired substitution of
    marketed goods to family production, itself
    related to a decrease in their relative prices
    (and maybe to changes in preferences).
  • Impact on human capital accumulation (through the
    mothers) negative until schools develop and their
    return becomes high enough compared to child
    work.
  • Later on, the search for increased health,
    education and home comfort would lead to a new
    rupture (and return to male bread-winner
    dominated families) after 1850 (until the 1970s).

29
Some quantification of the industrious revolution
G. Clark
  • Starts from a paradox
  • Daily agricultural wage higher in the 15th c.
    (after the Black Plague) than in 1850 (graph).
  • Following Engels law (share of food decreases in
    income), share of food in consumption and then in
    production should be lower in 1500 (although a
    substantial share is imported in 1850)
  • One solution is for non-agricultural population
    to be of similar size at both dates (those
    producing non-food items) (discussed last week
    remember urban population much lower in 1500
    20 vs 50).
  • Other solution less days of work per year in
    1500 (so more workers needed to feed the
    population).  paradise lost .
  • Method reconciling various estimates at the
    family level.

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31
  • Comparisons of yearly and daily wages in the same
    job (from micro data) provide an estimate of the
    number of days worked (table 2).But yearly wages
    include payments in kinds which are not always
    recorded. Numbers small and maybe not
    representative.
  • Using family budgets allows measuring the
    contribution of women and children to overall
    income. But it depends of many hypotheses (wage,
    proportion of those working, and their changes
    through time) (table 4).

32
Clark, industrious revolution
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  • Conclusions
  • Intensification in terms on number of days worked
    (as early as 17th c ?)
  • Intensification in terms of work practices
    (factory)
  • Intensification in childrens work, mostly
    resulting from urbanization
  • No change in womens work, or decrease in farms.

35
measuring time at work
  • Voth (2001) uses judiciary records
  • Testimonies provide narratives of a days
    activities work start and end, meal time
  • They also provide actual activity at a precise
    point in time
  • Both methods (used in sociology today) provide an
    estimate in hours/day.
  • Estimation of probability of work a given day
    table 1. Same with religious or civic days off.

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Results
  • Changes though time  saint Monday  disappears
    same for other days off. But hours per day
    stable.
  • Resists various robustness checks
  • But agricultural labour decreases.
  • Conclusion validates industrious revolution
    (graph).
  • But Results depend on supposing zero hours on
    days off, but 30 of normal pay for sundays.
    Equalling both, and considering some days off can
    occur on sundays (e.g. Christmas) brings back
    hours per year to 2900. Some representativity
    bias also possible.

38
Voth
39
One path to growth ?
40
  • Questions
  • To what extent were these changes special to
    England ?
  • Did neighboring European countries follow
    Britain, remain backward or develop in parallel
    but different fashion ?
  • what was specific to England ?
  • Innovation ?
  • The emergence of factories and mass production ?
  • Agriculture.
  • In which dimensions was Europe so special ?
  • Europe vs China
  • Answer
  • Some changes are common to all of NW Europe (with
    variable English advance) Proto-industrializatio
    n, innovation, urbanization.
  • Complementarities with England led to different
    development paths in western Europe
  • Divergence with China was late and partly
    accidental.

41
Innovation a European process
  • Machines
  • Up to 18th c., most sophisticated machines are
    consumption goods, not production goods
    (Vaucansons automates, Pascal or Bernoullis
    calculating machines, clocks).
  • Even the new production machines industry
    develops throughout Europe Senot screw
    threading machine (1795) corresponds to those by
    Maudslay (1797) or Wilkinson (1798).
    Paper-producing machines developed by Robert
    (1798) in France. Even the hydraulic hammers for
    iron are developed independently in 1840 by
    Bourdon and Nasmyth.
  • Steamboats developed by Hulls in the US, Jouffroy
    dAbbans in France, Fulton in Britain
    steam-powered coaches by Cugnot (1770) and
    Trevithick (1796). Next generation change for
    boats propellers (Sauvage, 1837) replace
    waterwheels.
  • Chemicals
  • Artificial soda (Leblanc, 1790), used for soap
    and glass production, wool grease-trimming and
    bleaching
  • Chlorine discovered (1774) and applied to
    bleaching in 1777 by Berthollet (textiles but
    also soon paper), and as disinfectant.

42
  • Macroinventions vs microinventions (Mokyr,
    Crafts)
  • Micro up-grades more related to  capabilities 
    (skilled labour, cost of labour, etc).
  • Macro inventions more to genius and accident
    cotton technology as example. Have more global
    impact on growth, but only through micro-ones.
    Easy to imitate ?
  • Crafts (1995) Britain's advantage in
    micro-invention comes from a better integrated
    market a population concentrated in urban areas,
    more literate and skilled (about 10 of
    population goes through apprenticeship in late
    18th c England, in principle a 7 years learning
    much above European norms, see Wallis). Maybe
    also from a higher financial development and
    lower direct taxes.
  • Conclusion invention widely spread, but British
    advantage in development.

43
Forms of industrial development
  • Three major types of industrial organizations
  • Village or urban workshops selling the food or
    consumption goods they produce to local consumers
    (nailer, shoemaker, cobbler, cutler, blacksmith,
    goldsmith, butcher, baker, etc). No major
    innovation.
  • Factories (manufactures or usines), requiring
    locally concentrated energy, production goods and
    labour. Mostly used for glass-work, brewery,
    tannery before 1800. Develop for textiles and
    metallurgy in late 18th c. England (but also
    France Oberkampf in Jouy). Specific to Western
    Europe' industrial revolution.
  • Rural workshops coordinated through the  putting
    out system  (especially important in textiles)
    or proto-industry.

44
Proto-industrialization / putting-out system
  • Considered by Mendels (1972) and others as the
    true origin of western Europe's modernization
    (early 17th c - late 19th c).
  • Urban organization of rural labor urban
    merchants
  • provide the raw material and machines, asks for
    precise products ( externalization)
  • Distribute the product between stages of
    production, some rural, some urban (finishing).
  • Sell the products in a wide area, leading to
    international and regional specialization.
  • Important as soon as the late middle ages in
    textiles, iron, cutlery, etc. Allows to escape
    the strict rules of urban craft guilds.
  • Economic advantages less risk and investment
    (no factory to build, no fixed wages) for the
    merchants welcome off-season work for peasants
    or their family.
  • Costs transportation and coordination costs
    competition with agricultural work (delays).
    Little control of the workforce (so piecework).
    Quality problems. No control of innovation.
  • Develops skills.

45
Change towards factories
  • With time and the development of markets, the
    costs increase relative to the advantages
  • rural labor little responsive to wages (income
    effect vs price effect)
  • increasing price of machines makes sparse use
    costly and increases principal-agent problems
    (use for other merchants, destruction).
  • The increase in machine use imposes some
    standardization (gears, screws, etc) (previously
    hand-made by each craftsman).
  • Entrepreneurs develop urban factories if urban
    wages not too high. They gain more independence
    towards merchants if they can produce on a large
    enough scale. This specialization leads to
    innovation.

46
  • But that change is not necessary for all
    industries
  • Standardization possible without factories
    (standard sizes for shoes and gloves invented
    around 1835 in Grenoble and Chateaurenaud,
    extended to all clothes by the founder of  La
    belle jardinière  and a success thanks to
    Thimonniers 1845 sewing machine) and the
    resulting development of ready to wear clothes
    produced in a decentralized way.
  • Technology not the leading cause many
    inventions adaptable to both factory and
    decentralized organization.
  • Various historians consider factories were used
    in order to intensify work rather than use new
    technologies.
  • Early historians of proto-industrialization
    suggested that increase in rural living standards
    led to an increase in the rural population, then
    to migration towards cities and proletarization,
    so the transition to factories.
  • In fact that sequence was not systematic at all
    urban wages were attractive but disamenities of
    large cities were also huge mid-size towns had
    their chance.

47
Two industrial paths ?
  • British style industrialization dominates in
    cotton and iron productions
  • Big urban factories.
  • Unskilled labor added to skilled labor in
    manufacturing
  • Huge productivity gains mostly passed to
    consumers and profits
  • Huge increases in quantities produced.
  • Higher share of industry in the workforce
  • Higher urban share
  • NB That modern path includes Belgium,
    northern France, small parts of Germany. See map
    of early railroads.

48
Crafts JIH 1989
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An alternative industrialization path flexible
technologies and clusters
  • Sabel Zeitlin or Piore suggest that flexible
    specialization (use of multi-purpose
    technologies thanks to skilled labour) may be an
    alternative to mass production (single purpose
    machines unskilled labour to produce standard
    goods).
  • They argue that the smithian ever-increasing
    specialization can dominate the marxian capital
    accumulation and substitution to labour as the
    best way to productivity growth, at least in some
    industries.
  • They emphasize that Smith recognized the extent
    of the market as a major limitation to
    specialization and growth (so efforts against
    protection and transportation costs, and even in
    favor of redistributive policies) but neglected
    technical rigidity as an obstacle to long term
    growth, and the importance of human capital.
  • Then the question is whether flexible
    specialization can avoid technological lock-in
    and corporatist restrictions to innovation
    without destroying human capital (as the
    factories did).

51
Industrial districts
  • Some consider that the development of industrial
    districts (A. Marshall) was a continental
    alternative to the English IR. And not an
    inferior one (e.g. Carnevali 2009).
  • Industrial districts inherited from
    proto-industry Lyon for silk, Saint-Etienne for
    ribbons, hardwarecalicoes in Alsace, woolens in
    Roubaix. Also Solingen or Remscheid in Germany
    (edge tools, cutlery, specialty steels),
    Sheffield Philadelphia textiles, Pawtuckets
    cotton.
  • Three defining elements
  • Variety of highly differenciated products
    constantly changing with tastes (and changing
    them) see french exports.
  • Flexible use of the most modern technologies
  • Creation of regional institutions for
     co-opetition  and innovation.

52
  • Jacquard looms (1800) as example of innovations
    substituting skilled for unskilled labour (allows
    to brocate complex patterns of silk thanks to
    instructions on perforated cards that allow to
    switch easily to another pattern). Adapted to
    Saint Etienne ribbons, Roubaix carpets and
    woolens, Philadelphia cottons.
  • Institutions 3 kind of institutions (outside
    urban guilds, which survive in some countries).
  • Local coordination dominant when units are
    small and coordinated by merchants (who sometimes
    assembled the final product) constantly
    rearranged subcontracting. Municipalities help
    develop skills and knowledge and police
    competition (punish abuse of trademarks, provide
    social protection to keep workers there, as in
    Lyon or Saint Etienne)
  • Paternalist big firm working as groups of
    artisans shops. (Mulhouse calico as example
    leading firms create technical education (e.g. in
    1822 chemistry courses), welfare institutions
    housing, savings schemes, public baths, maternity
    care).
  • Federated family firms (the Motte system in
    Roubaix) independent but connected medium-sized
    firms, insuring each other against extreme
    fluctuations (common financial reserves, but also
    marketing, purchasing, etc).
  • Force of these clusters automatic collective
    acquisition of skills on the job, makes workers
    attached to the place. Idem for code of
    competition among employers. Social mobility
    possible through innovation (mostly by workers).

53
  • New view emphasizes the persisting existence of
    small firms and industrial districts as proofs of
    the limits of mass production / increasing
    returns story.
  • Rediscovers visionary exponents of this
     republic of independent craftsmen  linked by
    the dependence on one another skills (Proudhon in
    France, Powderly in the US, leader of the Knights
    of Labor Schulze-Delitzsche in Germany, creator
    of cooperative banks).
  • These contemporaries emphasized complementarity
    of competition and cooperation, of human skills
    and machines (so they were considered then as
    utopian by both marxists and classical
    economists).
  • Then maybe the English way was made possible /
    imposed by available labour, but its national
    impact (total GDP growth) had its price in terms
    of individual welfare.
  • Then the major reason for English leadership was
    agricultural revolution (productivity much above
    continental levels from the 18th c at least)
    OBrien. Why a mix of market integration
    through low transaction costs (canals and
    rivers), institutional reasons (enclosures and
    canals not delayed by political institutions),
    innovations diffusion (from the Netherlands),
    large tenants (from the Black Death).

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  • Conclusion
  • Rates of growth of per capita income in both 18th
    and 19th c are similar in France and Britain no
    rupture with the IR (OBrien 1987)
  • Higher productivity in agriculture in England
    (compared to industry and to France)
  • Higher (relative and absolute) manufacturing
    productivity in France (with smaller industrial
    workforce).
  • France industry built progressively on a
    proto-industry of skilled workers.
  • England industry built a new model of factories
    massively employing poor unskilled workers
  • Comparative advantages complementarities
    within Europe specializations in different
    industries and industrial organizations
     variety of capitalisms 
  • Maybe differences in social cost of
    industrialization (Toynbee).
  • Increasing British population (a result of
    industrial development, or a cause ?) and high
    agricultural productivity as the main reasons for
    British-style industrial revolution.
  • British Revolution termed so because of the
    British success in the Napoleonic wars and the
    British international military (navy) dominance
    in the 19thc.

58
Europe vs China
  • Pomeranz's question what is the source of the
    Great Divergence between Europe and the rest of
    the world ?
  • is Europe's development internal or driven by its
    access (and domination) to the world ?
  • Test comparison with China ( Japan and parts
    of South-East Asia, eventually India).
  • Major question is when does the difference in
    income per capita originates ? If late, only a
    result of the IR.
  • Thesis China as rich as Europe until 1800
    South-West China (Yang-Tse delta) as rich as
    England.

59
Similarities between Europe and China
  • Escape to malthusian trap restriction of
    fertility in Europe infanticide and abortion in
    China.
  • Allows an increase in standard of living in spite
    of the growth of population. Life expectancy
    similar (nutrition maybe poorer in Asia, but
    hygiene much superior use of soap and boiled
    water, early antivariolic vaccination, water
    distribution networks).
  • Commerce is well developed in both regions thanks
    to maritime transport. European merchants in Asia
    don't dominate technically Asian ones.
  • High agricultural productivity (less livestock in
    Asia, but less necessary (e.g. for rice)
    specialization higher (transport of food/capita
    much more important than in Europe) if
    ecological pressure had persisted, Europe would
    have suffered from inferior agricultural
    technologies (allowing smaller yields).
  • Urbanization similar (higher in Japan... as in
    England)
  • Accumulation of capital in transportation
    networks in both regions ( large scale
    irrigation in China.

60
Institutions markets and entrepreneurship
  • Standard explanation by China as a proto
    communist country under the authoritarian rule of
    the Emperor no freedom, no competition, no
    markets, no entrepreneurs.
  • In fact allocation of capital, labor, and land by
    competitive markets in China was if anything
    freer than in Europe. Imperial China, by and
    large, had free labor, substantial migration
    (more than within Europe where access to free
    lands in the East was difficult), frequent land
    sales, and enforceable property rights, which
    allowed efficient resource use, while even in the
    most modern parts of Europe, entailment
    restricted land sales, and urban guilds
    restricted craftsmen.
  • Entrepreneurs were active in all markets. In
    1830, the wealth of Europe's richest businessman,
    Nathan Rothschild, was one tenth of that of Wu
    Bingjian, a Canton merchant who made business as
    far as the U.S.

61
Industry
  • Europeans cannot export manufactures to China
    until the 19th c lower quality and higher prices
    for almost everything.
  • European technology not dominant in 1750 China
    dominant in porcelain, silk, dye industry
    English innovations in cotton become important
    thanks to the access to foreign land (for cotton
    production) Chinese technologies progress and
    adapt to different challenges (energy saving,
    land saving).
  • Proto-industry permitted by free access to craft
    industry guilds are not important in textiles,
    no urban monopoly. Home production by women
    starts as early as 1600 as a massive practice.
    May allow better market integration than
    separation between factories and the agricultural
    labor market as in England (China more similar to
    continental Europe).

62
Wages
  • Central point if wages much higher in Europe,
    labor-saving investments are only encouraged
    there did Chinas low-wage, dense populations
    discourage labor-saving innovation?
  • Textile workers wages were roughly equal, and
    not noticeably less than in Europe. Still hotly
    debated. May be truer in 1750 than 1850.
  • Alternative solution can be servile labour on the
    side of high-wage labour were Chinese women
    forced to spin and weave in their households for
    wages below subsistence?
  • In textiles, male and female wages were similar.
    Britain did send more women to factories than
    China, but Chinese women sold their household
    products on competitive markets for fairly high
    prices. Similar to European proto-industry.
  • Lower wages dont seem an explanation of the
    great divergence.
  • Then as in Europe less development of factories
    may have resulted from less separation between
    agriculture and industry.

63
Major differences
  • From the mid-18th c., the Chinese development
    diffuses from the costs to the centre (where
    population increases, industry develops,
    increasing the price of raw materials for richer
    coastal regions) pressure on land increases, so
    land saving technologies are stimulated. Very
    high land productivity. Increasing malthusian
    constraint.
  • In Western Europe, access to overseas resources
    permits rich regions to develop, and Eastern
    Europe remains backward. This decreases the
    relative cost of land vs labor (land being now
    foreign to a large extent) and stimulates
    labor-saving technologies.
  • That access was organized by powerful European
    States which were able and willing to raise
    capital for that purpose. Rivalry between them
    helped (compared to the imperial power in China).
    Those having to maintain armies controlled each
    other on the mainland. England controlled
    overseas market because having only a Navy to pay
    for.
  • Trading manufactures for land-intensive food or
    raw material was attempted by China but didn't
    succeed on a large scale because of lack of
    political control.

64
Ecological constraint as major difference
  • Not higher in China, but high there too.
  • Massive deforestation ( of forests actually even
    lower in Europe) leads to soil erosion and dust
    storms (emergence of a  European monsoon 
    alternation of violent rains and drought).
  • - Stopped by early reforestation in Britain,
    France, Belgium after 1800, when pressure
    diminishes thanks to access to overseas land.
    Constraint maintained in China throughout the
    19th c.
  • Coal without coal, the rise in iron production
    in England would have been impossible same for
    much of home heating (coal consumed until 1815
    superior in caloric power to all remaining
    forests at that date in Britain). Not to speak of
    railways.
  • - In China, coal abundant in the North only
    transportation expensive. Blocks energy-intensive
    innovation. Develops energy saving technology
    (quite a paradox today !)
  • Conclusion solution in Europe, not in China
    coal and overseas land
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