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Lecture 9: The Industrial Revolution

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Title: Lecture 9: The Industrial Revolution


1
Lecture 9 The Industrial Revolution
2
Introduction
  • What actually happened 1750 and 1850 in Britain?
  • Certainly, tremendous increases in industrial
    output.
  • Apparently, a break from the Malthusian trap as
    well.

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Approaches to the Industrial Revolution
  • Old school
  • The Industrial Revolution was a true revolution.
  • Tremendous changes in the economic, political,
    and social fabric of Britain.
  • All of which were generated by a wave of
    innovation in key industries (again coal, cotton
    textiles, iron and steel) and could be physically
    seen in the move to machine/factory production
    and urbanization.

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Approaches to the Industrial Revolution
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Approaches to the Industrial Revolution
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Approaches to the Industrial Revolution
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Approaches to the Industrial Revolution
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Approaches to the Industrial Revolution
  • New school
  • Looking at the production figures, something
    definitely happened.

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Approaches to the Industrial Revolution
  • New school
  • In particular, industrial sectors were too small
    of a share of total output to really affect the
    whole economy.
  • Consequently, the British experience has been
    de-emphasized.

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Questions raised by the new school
  • How big were the revolutionized sectors?
  • The key here is the relation of sector shares and
    productivity growth to aggregate productivity
    growth.
  • Specifically, productivity growth in the economy
    is given by

15
Questions raised by the new school
  • What was the geographical pattern of the
    revolution?
  • Many areas saw little change.
  • So maybe we should not talk about a British
    industrial revolution, but rather a distinctly
    regional one.

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Questions raised by the new school
  • Also, if the industrial revolution was a truly
    revolutionary, why did all of the classical
    economists not see it?

17
Questions raised by the new school
  • Looking across Europe and indeed across the globe
    (to China especially), why was England first?
  • Or what was special about the English
    economy/policy/society?
  • Short answermaybe nothing.

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Questions raised by the new school
  • Finally, was the movement in population and wages
    the real break from the Malthusian trap or simply
    a shift in the technology curve?

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Causes of the industrial revolution?
  • One of the older explanations has been the
    scientific revolution of the 17th 18th
    centuries.
  • The argument is that basic research as well as
    the application of the scientific method helped
    the English transform industry via mechanization,
    the factory system, etc.

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Causes of the industrial revolution?
  • Problem is that almost none of the critical
    innovations of the industrial revolution period
    were achieved along scientific lines.

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Causes of the industrial revolution?
  • Some have argued (North especially) that the
    Glorious Revolutiona successful implementation
    of limited government sparked the development of
    public and private capital markets, eventually
    paving the way to the Industrial Revolution.

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Causes of the industrial revolution?
  • The evidence used to support this argument is the
    decline in interest rates in England around 1690.
  • However, Norths evidence is fragmentary, and his
    good quality data only start after 1720 at which
    time the rates decline.

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Causes of the industrial revolution?
  • Recently, Ken Pommeranz has suggested that the
    reason England experienced an industrial
    revolution was coal and colonies.

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Causes of the industrial revolution?
  • The problem with this argument is that
  • it is not apparent how necessary coal really was
    (substitutes available and only a few industries
    actually relied on coal)
  • the location of industry is endogenous, or at
    least it was in England (iron and steel
    industries located near coal deposits)
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