Title: Industrial Revolution
 1Industrial Revolution
- Why you live better than a king!
2A. Flashback  1973 (cont.) 
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 24B. Definition
The Industrial Revolution was
- the shift from making goods by hand in homes and 
 small shops,
 to making them by 
machine in large factories. 
 25B. Definition (cont.)
Domestic System 
 26B. Definition (cont.)
Factory System 
 27B. Definition (cont.)
-  The IR began in Great Britain around 1750 in 
 the textile industry.
-  By the 1800s, it had spread throughout Western 
 Europe and overseas to places like the United
 States and Japan.
28C. Improvements in Agriculture Came First!
Improved methods for growing food.
More food grown by less people.
Increased population. 
 29C. Improvements in Agriculture Came First! 
(cont.)
Increased demand for goods.
Improvements in manufacturing processes. 
 30D. Pre-requisites to Industrialization
  31D. Pre-requisites to Industrialization (cont.)
- Natural Resources 
- a. Energy
Coal
Water 
 32D. Pre-requisites to Industrialization (cont.)
- 1) Natural Resources 
- Steel 
-  
Coal
Iron Ore 
 33D. Pre-requisites to Industrialization (cont.)
- Natural Resources 
- c. Raw Materials 
-  
Sheep
Cotton 
 34D. Pre-requisites to Industrialization (cont.)
- Technology 
- Know-how 
-  Advanced education system  
research  development (RD)  
new inventions. 
 35D. Pre-requisites to Industrialization (cont.)
  36D. Pre-requisites to Industrialization (cont.)
- Government support for free enterprise 
- Money economy 
- Protection for private property 
- Enforcement of contracts 
- Incentive for entrepreneurs
Profit Motive! 
 37E. Living Conditions in Early Cities
-  Industrialization led to rapid urbanization. 
-  Example Population of Manchester, England 
- 1750  16,000 
- 1855  455,000
38E. Living Conditions in Early Cities (cont.)
-  Overcrowded housing. 
-  No indoor plumbing. 
-  No electricity. 
-  No sewer systems. 
-  No sanitation systems. 
-  No pollution controls. 
39(No Transcript) 
 40F. Working Conditions in Early Factories
-  12-16 hour days. 
-  6 days/week. 
-  No minimum wage. 
-  No paid holidays/vacations. 
-  No sick leave.
41F. Working Conditions in Early Factories (cont.)
-  No unemployment pay. 
-  No child labor laws. 
-  No safety standards. 
-  No workers compensation. 
-  No welfare programs.
42Importance of Inventions
- Did the invention 
- a) Improve production process? 
- b) Improve transportation/communication? 
- c) Make life easier/safer/more convenient/more 
 enjoyable?
43G. Should the government intervene? NO!
-  One of the big questions of early industrial 
 society was
- Should the government intervene in the economy to 
 help out the working class?
-  Many people answered this question with an 
 emphatic NO!
44Adam Smith 1723-1790
Scottish economist
Individual ambition serves the common good. 
 45G. Should the government intervene? NO! (cont.)
-  1) Adam Smith (cont.)  
-  Wanted a free market with no government 
 restrictions.
-  Factory owners create wealth for the whole 
 society.
-  They should be free to do as they please with 
 their profits.
46G. Should the government intervene? NO! (cont.)
-  1) Adam Smith (cont.)  
-  Money taken from owners and given to workers is 
 not money productively spent.
-  If their actions are limited, owners will be 
 less motivated to build and expand.
-  Laissez-Faire economics  let them do as they 
 will.
47Thomas Malthus 1766-1834
English demographer
The power of population is greater than the 
power of the earth to sustain man. 
 48G. Should the government intervene? NO! (cont.)
-  2) Thomas Malthus (cont.)  
-  Studied population growth. 
-  Population multiplies faster than the food 
 supply.
-  Tragedies like malnutrition, disease, war and 
 natural disasters help keep the population in
 check.
49G. Should the government intervene? NO! (cont.)
-  2) Thomas Malthus (cont.)  
-  If the government helped workers, theyd live 
 longer  have more kids.
-  Result would be rapid over-population and 
 ultimately mass starvation.
-  This was called the Malthusian Conclusion.
50Herbert Spencer 1820-1903
English philosopher
A nation which helps its good-for-nothings will 
become a good-for-nothing nation. 
 51G. Should the government intervene? NO! (cont.)
-  3) Herbert Spencer (cont.)  
-  As Charles Darwin said it is in nature, so 
 should it be with humans.
-  Survival of the fittest is the law of nature. 
-  If the strong survive and the weak die off, the 
 herd remains strong.
52G. Should the government intervene? NO! (cont.)
-  3) Herbert Spencer (cont.)  
-  Government aid to the workers will only help 
 unproductive people survive and breed.
-  Why infect the gene pool with the offspring of 
 the weak?
53H. Developed  Underdeveloped Countries
-  Countries that industrialized in the first 
 century of the IR quickly became the richest and
 most powerful in the world.
-  Those that didnt, have struggled to try and 
 catch up.
54H. Developed  Underdeveloped Countries (cont.)
-  Four measures of the wealth of a country 
-  1)  working in agriculture. 
-  2) Per capita GDP. 
-  3) Literacy rate. 
-  4) Life expectancy.
55Developed Countries
 in ag. Per capita GDP Adult literacy rate Life exp. in years
U.K. 1.4 35,424 99.0 80.1
U.S. 0.7 48,442 99.0 79.4
Japan 3.9 34,294 99.0 82.7
Russia 9.8 21,248 99.6 70.3 
 56Developing Countries
 in ag. Per capita GDP Adult literacy rate Life exp. in years
Mexico 13.7 15,270 86.1 76.2
China 36.7 8466 92.2 74.8
India 52.0 3652 74.0 64.7 
 57Underdeveloped Countries
 in ag. Per capita GDP Adult literacy rate Life exp. in years
Nigeria 70.0 2532 61.3 46.9
Ethiopia 85.0 1116 42.7 52.9
Afghanistan 78.6 1202 28.1 43.8 
 58H. Developed  Underdeveloped Countries (cont.)
-  Percentage of the worlds population that lives 
 in developed countries
-  15
59H. Developed  Underdeveloped Countries (cont.)
-  Percentage that lives in developing or 
 underdeveloped countries
-  85
60I. Should the government intervene? YES! (cont.)
-  1) Utilitarians  
-  The goal of society should be to promote the 
 greatest happiness for the greatest number.
-  To this end, government should 
-  1) Provide for universal education. 
-  2) Allow universal suffrage. 
61I. Should the government intervene? YES! (cont.)
-  3) Allow workers to organize into unions to 
 bargain for shorter hours and better wages.
-  4) Pass laws to end the worst abuses of the 
 factory system like child labor.
62I. Should the government intervene? YES! (cont.)
-  2) Socialists  
-  Workers make the goods that create the wealth 
 of the society.
-  This wealth should be used to benefit everyone, 
 not just greedy factory owners.
63I. Should the government intervene? YES! (cont.)
-  2) Socialists (cont.)  
-  Factories should be nationalized (taken over by 
 the government).
-  The profits can then be used to improve the 
 living conditions of the working class.
64I. Should the government intervene? YES! (cont.)
-  2) Socialists (cont.)  
-  The socialist movement was split into two 
 groups
-  a) evolutionary socialists. 
- and 
-  b) revolutionary socialists. 
65I. Should the government intervene? YES! (cont.)
- a) Evolutionary Socialists  
-  This group thought socialism would evolve over 
 time.
-  If they formed political parties, and won 
 elections, then they could take over.
-  For this reason, they were called Democratic 
 Socialists.
66I. Should the government intervene? YES! (cont.)
- Revolutionary socialists  
-  They thought factory owners would never give up 
 without a fight.
-  Workers must arm themselves, kill the owning 
 class and take control of the factories by force.
67I. Should the government intervene? YES! (cont.)
- b) Revolutionary socialists (cont.)  
-  The wealth of the society could then be equally 
 distributed.
-  Once this goal of a classless society was 
 achieved, it would be utopia.
-  This group was called Communists.
68Karl Marx 1818-1883
German philosopher
- Known as the Father of Communism.
- The Communist Manifesto (1848)