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Perceptions of the Irish economy and the politics of the economy ... Land Act grants 3Fs' (fair rent; fixity of tenure; freedom of sale of tenant right) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Economic%20Development%20in%20Ireland%201798-1921


1
Economic Development in Ireland 1798-1921
  • Prof. Peter Gray
  • Queens University Belfast

2
Economic Developments in Ireland 1798-1921
  • Three aspects
  • Economic developments
  • Perceptions of the Irish economy and the politics
    of the economy
  • Economic policy

3
The national question(s) and the Irish economy
  • What was the Irish economy?
  • A regional economy within UK?
  • A series of regional economies within Ireland?
  • A Irish national economy?
  • A colonial economy?
  • A global economy?

Irish railway network, 1900
4
Six phases of economic development
  • 1. An era of boom c.1793-1815
  • 2. An era of malaise c.1815-45
  • 3. An era of catastrophe 1845-52
  • 4. An era of rising expectations c.1852-77
  • 5. An era of rural conflict c.1878-1903
  • 6. The eclipse of economics? c.1903-1921

5
Three demographic regimes
  • 1. A regime of population growth c.1793-1845
  • A regime of demographic collapse c.1845-51
  • A regime of sustained decline c.1852-1921

6
Relative population figures
7
1. The era of boomc. 1793-1815
  • Domestic textile production in Ulster, late 18thC

8
Agricultural change
  • 1793-1815 wars boost Irish agriculture through
    high demand and rising food prices
  • Growing shift from pasture to tillage and
    increasing grain exports to GB
  • Ireland as Britains bread basket from 1790s
  • Growing landowning expenditure and indebtedness
  • Increased labour-power and potato-cultivation the
    basis of Irish tillage expansion

9
Cottier agriculture
  • Subdivision of land promotes rapid rural
    population growth from 1770s
  • Cottier peasants on 5-10 acre holdings rented
    yearly
  • Conacre labourers rent 1-5 acre potato land in
    return for labour
  • Growing reliance on potato subsistence

Clachan settlement, Derrynane, Co. Kerry, 1845
10
Proto-industrialisation
  • Linen industry expands rapidly from 1770s
  • Primarily a cottage industry in spinning and
    weaving, but boosts commercial centres such as
    Belfast, Derry, Newry and Dublin
  • Also promotes rapid subdivision and population
    growth
  • Epicentre of proto-industrialisation in Co.
    Armagh
  • Development of early cotton manufacturing in
    Belfast, Dublin, Co. Cork 1780s-1820s
  • First shipyards open in Belfast 1790s

Green Linen Hall Belfast (c 1834)
11
2. The era of malaisec. 1815-1845
Cottiers cabin, Co. Kerry, 1845
12
Agricultural crisis
  • 1815 Corn Laws fail to protect Ireland from
    growing competition
  • Currency deflation creates debt crisis
  • Harsher landlord-tenant relations increase rural
    conflict
  • Expanding grain exports to 1830s make some
    richer
  • But leave cottiers and labouring poor
    impoverished and vulnerable
  • Emigration starts to rise (c.1.5m 1815-45)

13
Contraction of the textile industry
  • Ireland subject to intensified British
    competition post-1815
  • Irish cotton and woolens production collapses
    1820s
  • Mechanisation of linen spinning develops from
    mid-1820s in Belfast
  • Retreat of linen production into linen
    triangle of east Ulster from 1820s
  • Small textile producers in NW, SW and midlands
    thrown back into dependence on agriculture
  • Collapse of industry in Dublin 1826

14
British economic policy in Ireland Assimilation
  • Union followed by measures of economic
    assimilation
  • Abolition of Irish pound and exchequer 1816
  • Full free-trade between Ireland and GB 1824
  • 1826 Subletting Act seeks to create English-style
    landless labouring class
  • Preference for laissez-faire, especially under
    Tories

15
British economic policy in Ireland Liberal
intervention
  • Increase infrastructural spending from c.1815
  • Irish Board of Works 1831
  • - develops Shannon waterway, roads and harbours
  • National Board of Education 1831
  • - offers non-denominational primary education
  • Irish Poor Law 1838
  • - 130 union workhouses with basic relief of
    destitute
  • - some assistance to dispensaries, hospitals
  • Irish Railway Commission Report 1838
  • Devon Commission Report 1845
  • But constraints of laissez-faire

16
3. The era of catastropheThe Great Famine,
1845-52
Soup Kitchen queue, 1847
17
The potato crisis
  • Potato crop hit by fungal blight phytopthora
    infestans
  • Partial failures 1845, 1848, 1849
  • Total failure 1846
  • Shortfall of 12m tonnes of potatoes by 1846-7 a
    real food crisis
  • Continuing food exports 1846 cause uproar
  • Failure of affordable imports to meet food gap
    1846-7
  • Prices falling 1847-50, but crisis of
    entitlements means continuing famine

18
Famine
  • Famine accompanied by devastating epidemic
    diseases
  • Large numbers of deaths from late 1846-spring
    1849
  • Late and inadequate state response hampered by
    laissez-faire ideology
  • Some, but never adequate, private charity
  • Coincides with industrial downturn in GB 1847-9

Charitable relief in Co. Clare, 1849
19
Famine policies
  • Relatively generous aid 1845-6
  • Withdrawal from interference in food markets from
    1846
  • Relief through public works (1846-7) soup
    kitchens (summer 1847)
  • Poor Law Extension Act 1847
  • Encumbered Estates Act 1849 places burden of
    Irish recovery on free trade in land
  • Some relief from famine debts 1853, in return for
    extension of income tax

Punch on British aid, 1846
20
Mortality 1846-51
  • 1.1m excess deaths 1846-51 (1/8 of population)
  • 1m emigrants 1846-51
  • Crisis accompanied by widespread clearances by
    landlords
  • Population decline highest in western counties
  • Legacy of trauma and political anger

21
4. The era of rising expectations c.1852-1877
22
Post-Famine recovery
  • Agriculture shifts increasingly to cattle raising
    and export
  • Ireland increasingly tied into global market
    trends
  • Some rise in living standards, but subject to
    sharp recessions 1859-63, 1877-80
  • Expansion of commerce, shops, credit, literacy
  • But continuing poverty and high emigration
    especially from rural west
  • Five million emigrants 1851-1914
  • Tensions between improving landlords and tenant
    farmers, especially early 1850s, later 1860s,
    later 1870s forces Gladstones first land act,
    1870

23
Belfasts industrial revolution
  • Specialised development of linen industry
  • Harland and Wolff shipyard established 1861
  • Diversification into engineering, rope making
  • Population of Belfast more than triples to
    386,000 1851-1911
  • Draws in population from rural Ulster

Harland and Wolff, Belfast one of worlds
largest shipyards by 1900
24
5. The era of rural conflictc. 1878-1903
Eviction scene, 1881
25
Land War (1879-82)
  • Agricultural crisis 1877-80
  • The Land War 1879-82, led by Irish National
    Land League
  • Features boycotts, rent strikes, initimidation,
    riots
  • 1881 Land Act grants 3Fs (fair rent fixity of
    tenure freedom of sale of tenant right)
  • 1882 Arrears Act
  • Land War curbs powers of landlords, but fails to
    deliver full demands of small farmers and
    labourers

Attack on a process server, 1880
26
Continuing land conflict 1885-1903
  • Further agrarian depressions 1884-9, late 1890s
  • Plan of Campaign agitation 1886-90
  • United Irish League agitation 1898-1901
  • Conservatives accept principle of land purchase
    from 1885
  • Wyndhams Land Act 1903 begins mass purchase of
    farms by occupying tenants with state loans

Anti-landlord cartoon, 1882
27
6. The eclipse of economics?c. 1903-1921
New Creamery, Killeshandra, Co. Cavan, 1911
28
Constructive Unionism
  • 1885 Ashbourne Land Act
  • 1903 Wyndham Land Act
  • 1891 Congested Districts Board seeks to promote
    development in west
  • Sir Horace Plunkett promotes agricultural
    co-operation through Irish Agricultural
    Organisation Society (1894)
  • 1899 Irish Department of Agriculture established
  • Widespread establishment of creameries

29
Labour
  • Growing concerns over urban slums Iveagh Trust
    in Dublin
  • Emergence of mass labour movement
  • 1907 Belfast dock strike
  • 1909 ITGWU formed
  • 1913 Dublin lockout strike
  • James Larkin promotes Irish syndicalism
  • Marxist James Connolly attempts to tie Irish
    Labour movement to Republicanism, Easter 1916

Titanic propellers, Belfast, 1912
James Connolly
30
Nationalist economics
  • Ranch War 1906-9, but land radicalism
    increasingly marginal
  • Sinn Féin demand for Irish economic autarky from
    c.1905
  • 1916 Proclamation contains vague socio-economic
    promises
  • Dáil Éireann appeals to labour through 1919
    Democratic Programme
  • Labour must wait 1919-21

Arthur Griffith, leader of Sinn Féin, 1905-17
31
Unionist economics
  • High water mark of Ulster heavy industry RMS
    Titanic launched 1912
  • Belfast businessmen fund Ulster Unionism
  • Argument that Ulster prosperity based on Union
    and empire
  • First World War reinforces economic differences
    of two Irelands
  • But collapse of Belfasts heavy industry after
    1920

Titanic propellers, Belfast 1912
32
Conclusion Irish economies by 1920s
  • Lasting trauma of Great Famine
  • Considerable economic advances from 1850
  • Irish living standards above most of E and S
    Europe (but below GB and US)
  • Land issue mostly resolved by mid-1920s
  • Continuing high structural emigration
  • Significant poverty in rural west and urban areas
  • IFS heavily dependent on agricultural exports to
    GB
  • NI dependent on outdated heavy industry

33
Follow up
  • Visit QUBs interactive website
  • Irish History Live
  • www.qub.ac.uk/sites/irishhistorylive/
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