Title: Why Britannica Created the Modern World.
1Why Britannica Created the Modern World.
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5Britain, Acholi, Amin, Obote
6Statement? True or False
- Every great period of advancement in civilization
is preceded by advancements in transportation
and/or communications.
7Thomas Friedman
- Postulates the world is getting Hotter, Flatter
and more crowded. - By Flatter he means closer together in terms of
communications and transportation.
8Adam Smith Father of Modern Economics
- Wealth of Nations
- Government interference in economic systems harm
them. - Looked at the relationship Between Supply and
Demand. - The value of Outputs must exceed the cost of
inputs to make production viable.
9Adam Smith
- Price is a function of utility (does it do
something people want/need) - Scarcity (how much of the stuff is there
- Utility, Scarcity, demand and price affects each
other. - Think about Electric cars?
10Adam Smith
- Left to itself, economic forces will be guided by
an invisible hand to make supply and demand
seek stability
11Hopefully the price of the outputs exceeds the
cost of your inputs
- Inputs
- Capital (money)
- Management
- Labor
- Raw Materials
- Machines
- Energy
- Transportation (infrastructure)
- Research and Development.
- TAXES
- Profit
- OutputsProduct or Services
12Increased Efficiencies lowers cost of inputs
- Efficiencies include
- Educated labor force.
- Machinery (reduces labor cost, better quality)
- Infrastructure
- Economy of Scale the more you make of something,
the smaller the cost for each unit. - -what if each item of clothes you wore were
hand made?
131800
- Most people lived in one room, maybe two.
- Cooked with wood or charcoal
- One or two suit of clothes, Sunday go to meeting
clothes and everyday. - Lived and died 20 miles from where born.
- Life expectancy at birth 40/50, same as hunter
gatherers. - About a Billion people Worldwide
14In 1800
- On Average, the average person in the world was
living at about the same level. - That level was the same standard of living as
they were living at 6000 years before. - Calories consumed
- Health care/knowledge
- Work for calories actually greater than hunter
gathers - clothing
- Living conditions
15Mondern Hunter Gather 37a.b. 57 at 20
England 38birth 54 at 20 China 26 50 N.
Africa 24 41
161800 Brits were less efficient than
Hunger/Gathers at obtaining calories
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18Thomas Malthus
- Postulated that there was a direct relationship
between Population, death rate and standard of
living. - Given a population with a high standard of living
(food, high survival rate), you would have
population growth. - As the population grows beyond the ability to
support it with food, the standard of living
would drop. - Then, eventually, particularly under pressure,
people would die off, until the population was
low enough to raise standard of living. - For instance The net effect of the plague was a
raise in living standard. - This model worked well for the world until 1800.
19Between 1800 and now
- World population has grown from 1 billion to
about 6.5 billion and continues to grow rapidly. - What would Malthus predict?
20Malthusian Trap
- Production will increase population and living
standard until BAM, population will exceed the
ability of the resources to sustain it,
regardless of efficiencies, living standards will
drop, people will die. - When enough people die (eg Plague), resources
will be enough, population will rise.
21Irony
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23What Malthus didnt think about What would
happen if you injected modern medicine into this
equation?
- If people were saved from dying, standard of
living would drop, but there wouldnt be the
ensuing mass death.
24Britain breaks the mold
- In England, Everything changed
- Population increased
- Standard of living went way up.
- Life expectancy began to rise.
- What happened? And Why there?
25Gun, Germs and Steel?
- Diamond suggest geography was the chief
determinant in European ascendency. - People living on the same latitude could benefit
by similar climates, animal life and information
sharing.
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27Guns, Germs
- People, who left Africa, first settled in Central
Asia/Middle East, and domesticated large animals
for grains and labor. - These plants and animals flourished along that
latitude, allowing civilizations to expand. - Domestication freed up time and people to
diversify occupations and expand civilizations.
28Guns, Germs, etc.
- The constant interaction of man and animals
allowed germs, small pox, flu, etc to spread back
and force and eventually people along that
latitude built immunities, that those in their
future colonies didnt have. - Its estimated that as many as 90 of the Native
American population died of small pox.
29Guns..
- In addition metallurgical technology spread along
that latitude and people got better and better
and producing strong steel swords and the like,
which later led to industrial uses of metals.
30Guns
- Then gunpowder from China was matched with
missile technology from Europe (why do you think
Galileo went to Pisa?) creating guns and canons
that people along that latitude never developed. - Europe dominated.
- But why Britain?
31Contrary to today, the Wealthy had a population
boom. These people made money off the land, so
their extra sons joined the army, went to school,
studied scientifically and invented cool
stuff.Provided England with an educated middle
class.
32The Dissenters Puritan Work ethic
- Had no problem with exploring the natural world.
- No problem making money in manufacturing, thats
what was left to them by the snob classes. - Hated play/fun, after all, idleness is the
devils workshop - Children were little adult, no adolescents.
- a penny saved is a penny earned.
33Dissenter Puritans
- Protestants believe that every man has a personal
relationship with God, whose word is spread
through the Bible. - To read the Bible, you must be literate.
- So, in England, you had a large, disenfranchised,
literate, hard working underclass who were
allowed to work and make money in manufacturing. - Not be design, by chance.
34Puritans lived by a strict moral code
35Puritan Work Ethic or meme
- Puritans believed in predestinationbut how do
you know you are a choosen person? - Well, by the way you acted, if you looked moral,
you must be choosen?
36Why Britain?
- The Enlightenment and Reformation increased
scientific thought and the reformation literacy. - They had a large increase in population of
educated upper and middle class people, freed
from the land. - Dissidents were funneled into mining and
manufacturing with profit as motivation. (Not
snobby landed aristocrats). Banks funneled
capital from aristocrats (sugar, tea plantations)
to dissidents very efficiently. - Puritan academies taught math, science and
engineering, studied the natural world. - The non-nobles slowly began to gain political
power, creating more of a meritocracy. Power
follows money. - Coal mining and dissidents led to the Steam
Engines and massive changes in efficiencies, the
world got flatter.
37Britains Advantages by 1800
- Stable government, where power was shifting to
money from birth. (Magna Carta) - No Wars on Home Turf to disrupt production.
(unlike Europe with the 30 years war, French
Rev., Napoleaon, Franco-Prussian War , etc.) - A population boom in wealthy and business
classes, provided literate middle class to run
your business.
38Three Big Inventions
- James Watts Steam engine, originally to pump
water out of coal mines, eventually to power
everything until the internal combustion engine. - The Railroad which began in the early 1800s in
England bringing raw materials to centralized
factories and manufactured goods to shore for
export. - Eventually moving armies and people, no more only
living and dying 20 miles from home. - Steam Ships, They could sail against the wind,
talk about a flattening world.
39Tinkerers
- Many of the inventions of the industrial
revolution came from tinkers, guys in their
metaphoric garages - Eli Whitney cotton gin, interchangable parts.
- Watt Steam engines.
- Marconi wireless radio
- The internal combustion engine.
40ICE
41- Agricultural revolution of the 18th century
provided food to defeat Malthusian trap. Freed up
farm labor to become city labor. - Crop rotation
- Farm enclosures
- fertilizers
- Established trading posts became foothold for
colonialist and the U.S. a huge provider of food,
that could get there fast because of steam ships.
(Potato famine)
42Kuchnet and the U Curve
- Economist Kuchnet hypothesizes that in an
agricultural society incomes a relatively equal
in an industrial one they become less equal as
the knowledgable and capitalists make more than
labor - But then labor gets more education, demands
higher wages and better conditions and the income
begins to equalize.
43Pareto hypothesizes that
- Income disparity doesnt matter, as long as the
increase of wealth in the rich, also benefits the
poor. True?
44Efficiencies of inputs
- Inputs
- Capital (money) Banks, Barklays, Lloyds,
joint-stocks, insurance.. - Management Literate dissenters, population boom
in educated classes. - Labor mostly literate protestants, work ethic
(dour dissenters), schools - Raw Materials taken, forced trade, no tariffs.
- Machines steam powered, mass produced (economy
of scale), machined, interchangeable parts some
10001 in efficiency. - Energy Coal, lots of it
- Transportation (infrastructure) canals, roads,
trains, steamships - Research and Development literate, amateur
scientists (enlightenment) - TAXES None
- Profit Tons.
45There it is
- Early colonization provided raw materials and
knowledge(g,g,s) - Banks to move capital from colonies
- Dissenters the work ethic, incentives, scientific
inquiry, literacy. - Britain the safe government Adam Smith Laissez
faire economics. - Raising middle class of workers/mgmt consumerism
and markets, keeping up with the . - GSS, the easy exchange of knowledge, metallurgy,
- Agricultural advancement. Interchange of crops,
No Malthus - The steam engine, precise machine tools,
interchangeable parts, coal - the power, mass production (economy of scale,
massive efficiency), infrastructure,
Transportation and communications.
46Children were used to pull the coal from the mines
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52New Inventions meant a massive shift in
efficiency more outputs with less inputs.
53With efficiency income followed.
54WWMS?
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561836 to 1862 repeating, breech loaded guns
changed the face ofwar. Required
interchangeable, machined parts.
57By the late 19 century
- England had expanded its colonies and economy to
the point where it dominated the entire world. - Britain ruled with an iron hand, justified by
Social Darwinism.
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59Ad extolling White Men to help natives get clean
60The U.S. Philippines War
61White Mans Burden
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66Politically,
- Workers conditions and the expansion of crowded
cities and the problems they brought led to - Progressive movement Modern liberalism
- Socialism government responsibility to all the
people. - Communism (Marx and Engel) extreme socialism,
all goods and services equally shared. Government
control of the means of production/ - Modern Conservatism and laissez faire economics.
Economic Darwinism. - Social Darwinism to justify it all. Superior
countries weremeant to rule the rest. Those
countries were on top for a reason.
67- 1801 Britain makes Ireland part of a single
British kingdom. Parliament in Dublin is
abolished. The Anglican Church is to be
recognized as the official church in Ireland. No
Catholics are to be allowed to hold public
office.
68Ethnic divisions in Ireland
- Anglo-Irish descendants of the British nobles
Anglicans (Episcopalians) who expropriated the
land and forced labor on the Irish Catholics. - Scots-Irish, protestants, Presbyterians, imported
from Scotland, favored by the British, yet
treated poorly, as laborers in the North. Now
dominate Northern Irish politics - Irish Catholics the original Irish, displaces and
disenfranchised by the British between the 16th
and early 20th century.
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70South Africa
- To keep away Dutch colony away from
France/Napoleon the British formally take control
of Cape Town, South Africa and begin movement up
the East Coast of Africa. - Napoleon had its eye on India and South Africa
would have given them a foothold.
711860s
- Britain Dissolves the East Indian Company, and
establishes formal political control of India
(Pakistan) - In 1875 Britain takes control of the Suez Canal,
and establishes their economic interest there. - In the late 19th c. the British force the
capitulations on the weak Ottoman Empire,
taking control of choke points along their trade
route Egypt, Yemen, Iraq, the emirates.
72British Empire at WWI (1/4 of the Worlds
Population falls under British control
73World in 1900
74- China was attempting to form a democracy after
fall of the Manchus, but was carved up in the
Open Door Policy and two Opium wars with Britain.
The U.S., Japan and major European powers glommed
on. - Korea was a Japanese colony.
- Taiwan too.
75The division of China
76Spheres of Influence.
77Congress of Berlin 1878 Europe carves up Africa
78By WWI
- Winners in the Industrialization game.
- Britain dominated the seas and most of the rest
of the world - Germany had formed under Bismark, began to
expand, industrialized. - France had finally established some political
stability, colonized, industrialized. - Japan had become a major force in Asia,
colonizing Northern China, Korea, Taiwan and
beating Russia in a war. - U.S. dominated South America and the Caribbean
and other Spanish colonies (Philippines, Puerto
Rico, Virgin Islands). - Neutral
- Russia had expanded, but not industrialized.
- Losers
- The Netherlands (Dutch), Portugal, Spain, the
Ottoman Empire and Austria-Hungary were slipping
away into the dust bin of history.
79Britain all dates Circa, its a process.
- Canada (18th c.)
- Australia (1788)
- Ireland (1801)
- South Africa (1805)
- India/Burma/Pakistan (1857)
- Singapore (1819)
- Yemen (Cap)
- Hong Kong/China (latter 19th c.)
- Palestine (Cap)
- Iraq (Cap)
- (Iran kind of, BP, 1913)
- Zimbabwe (Rhodesia, 1880)
- Tanzania (Tanganyika, Germany 1840, Britain after
WWI) - Kenya (1890)
-
80France
- Northwest Africa
- Syria
- Lebanon
- Indochina (Vietnam, Cambodia)
81U.S.
- Puerto Rico
- Virgin Islands
- Philippines
- Economically dominated all of Central America,
some of South America. - Hawaii
82Japan
- Korea
- Taiwan
- Parts of Northern China (Manchuria)
83Others
- Portugal
- Angola
- Mozambique, Tanzania
- Netherlands
- Indonesia
- Italy Libya, Somalia
- Germany Namibia, Rwanda, Uganda
- Belgium Congo
84By WWI
- Ottoman Empire had been divided between Russia
(the Caucuses), Britain (Egypt, Palestine, Iraq,
Saudi Penn.) and France (Lebanon, Syria) by the
Capitulations (forced interests in those
areas). - Finally finished off after WWI.
- Choose the wrong side to back.
85The Capitulations
86Ottoman Empire
- From the 16th Century to the early 20th Century,
ethnic Turks (who were Sunni Muslims) from
Anatolia, or modern day Turkey, invaded - Syria,
- Palestine/Israel/Lebanon,
- Saudi Arabia,
- Egypt/Sudan,
- Greece,
- Albania,
- Vienna( which they failed, to conquer).
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90European Domination 1914