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The Industrial Revolution and the
Atlantic Economy
Determining the effect the Atlantic economy had upon the maturation
of the Industrial Revolution is no easy task. Certainly,
determining with certitude the precise origins of the Industrial
Revolution has irked economic historians for many generations. At
one time, the sudden, ‘accidental’ development of technological
innovations like the steam engine might have been sufficient to
explain the emergence of the new economic order, but this
interpretation does not tell us nearly enough about the
international, trans-Atlantic forces that created modern British
industrialism. In any event, we can all agree that the Atlantic
Economy played a key role in the formation of one of history’s most
profound social and economic transformations. With that in mind,
this paper will hypothesize that the Atlantic economy was essential
to the emergence of the Industrial Revolution as we understand it
today. Specifically, this paper will argue that the Atlantic
economy provided a fairly massive consumer market that demanded
newer and more efficient means of production to satisfy this
external demand for British goods. In terms of an economic
model to substantiate this claim, it is necessary to look no further
than demographic theories and studies introduced by Thomas Brinley
in some of his best work. This paper will also briefly detail the
unmistakable impact of the privatization of hitherto common lands in
the eighteenth century as providing an impetus for industrial
manufacturing development. In conclusion, it should be evident
that population displacement and population growth – occurring
within the Atlantic economy comprising Great Britain and its
peripheral colonies – prompted the Industrial Revolution.
This is so because of the imperialist
realities of the period in question. The European economy was very much
a global economy by the late eighteenth century – and this remained so
because Europeans, especially the British, had a monopolistic control
over world trade (Hooker, para. 3). With huge international markets,
especially in North America, the need to create a more productive,
efficient manufacturing base to service this captive demand for goods
grew pressing in the extreme. Think about it: prior to the eighteenth
century, the economy of Great Britain had been, for the most part,
agricultural and thus subsistence-based. Production was based around
keeping the family alive rather than about creating a surplus of goods
for the market; with the development of a manufacturing economy
dependent upon external markets, surplus production became essential (para.
4).
For the sake of accuracy, it must be
pointed out that an ever-growing demand for manufactured goods in
captive colonial enclaves was not the only reason for the new economic
order. For instance, the exponential increase in food production in the
late eighteenth century was a direct result of the enclosure laws of the
period; these parliamentary decrees permitted common lands held
previously by tenant farmers to be enclosed in large, private holdings
(“Enclosure Acts”, para. 1-2 and “Miscellaneous Collection 1047”,
subsection 3). This meant that surplus tenants were driven off of the
land and into the urban centres of Great Britain (Hooker, para. 5).
Because agricultural land was now a private concern, agricultural
production grew exponentially at the same time as a new wage-dependent
labour force emerged to provide the British manufacturing industry with
all the cheap labour it could desire (para. 4-5). So two of the
foundations of the Industrial Revolution were in place: more food meant
a greater population sustainability; moreover, with land now a scarcity,
many erstwhile squatters had to seek employment in the cities or,
alternatively, seek a new life in the New World. As these people
emigrated to the New World, they swelled the captive consumer base of
the colonies; this, in turn, sparked greater demand for the
manufacturing goods of the industries who were also blessed with a
captive labour force that seemingly grew by leaps and bounds. With
these factors at work, it was not long before profound technological
innovation was taking place in Great Britain (Rempel, “The Industrial
Revolution – Technological Change Since 1700”, para. 1-3). Incidentally,
the salubrious effects of ‘population displacement’ (displacement) is
cited at length in Brinley’s 1954 text, Migration and Economic Growth;
albeit, in this case, he quotes Edgeworth’s views on the matter
(17-18). Finally, the manufacturing interests of Great Britain, it
should also be pointed out, were empowered by the steady passage of
legislation that favoured mercantile and capitalist interests (Hooker,
para. 5). To sum it all up, by privatizing the land, English law-makers
set in motion the Great Industrial Revolution.
To conclude briefly, this paper has
suggested that the Atlantic economy was vital to the development of the
British Industrial Revolution because of its status as a captive
market. The enclosure laws of the eighteenth century compelled
population displacement to the cities and, every bit as importantly, to
the colonies. This migration meant the swelling of that aforementioned
captive consumer base and, in turn, increased demand for more efficient
means of mass-production. In short, the Industrial Revolution was the
logical outgrowth of a consumer-based economy – imperialist – style.
Works Cited
Hunter, Jason and
Wasch, John. “Enclosure Acts”. The Grade Nine Social Studies Website
– Curriculum. 2003. 21 January, 2005.
http://www.cssd.ab.ca/tech/social/tut9
Brinley, Thomas.
Migration and Economic Growth: a Study of Great Britain and the
Atlantic Economy. Cambridge: University of Cambridge Press, 1954.
Hooker, Richard.
“The Industrial Revolution of the Eighteenth Century”. World
Civilizations – An Internet Classroom and Anthology. 1999. Washington
State University. 21 January, 2005.
http://www.wsu.edu/~dee/ENLIGHT/INDUSTRY.HTM
Miscellaneous Collection 1047 –
Enclosure Acts: 1785-1793”. British Library of Political and
Economic Science Website. 2005. London School of Economics. 21
January, 2005
http://library-2.lse.ac.uk/archives/handlists/EnclosureActs/EnclosureActs.html
Rempel, Gerhard.
“The Industrial Revolution – Technological Change Since 1700” Lecture
List for Western Civilization II. 1998. Western New England College. 21
January, 2005
http://mars.acnet.wnec.edu/~grempel/courses/wc2/lectures/industrialrev.html
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