Industrial Revolution - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Industrial Revolution

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Why England? Agricultural Revolution - increased food production = lower prices = greater purchase power Geo Factors - island nation combined w/ canal building of ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Industrial Revolution


1
Industrial Revolution
2
Why England?
  • Agricultural Revolution - increased food
    production lower prices greater purchase
    power
  • Geo Factors - island nation combined w/ canal
    building of 1770s - move goods
  • Geo Factors - large deposits of coal and iron -
    important raw materials for IR

3
Why England?
  • Economic - supply of capital - effective central
    bank and well developed credit markets
  • Economic - Entrepreneurs - a new middle class
    willing to risk capital

4
Why England?
  • Political - stable government w/ limited economic
    controls
  • Political - enclosure movement had created a
    labor force willing to move to urban areas

5
Why England?
  • Had the markets - expanding Atlantic economy -
    trade w/ Americas

6
Cotton Textiles
  • Cottage Industry/Domestic System/Putting Out
    System - becoming inefficient
  • Kay - flying shuttle
  • Hargreaves - spinning jenny
  • Arkwright - water frame
  • Crompton - spinning mule
  • Cartwright - power loom

7
Steamthe game changer
  • 1760s James Watt and steam engine
  • Location not dependent on rivers
  • 1787 Britain imported 22 million pounds of cotton
    - 1840 366 million
  • Steam engine combined w perfection of iron
    railroads that transformed transportation

8
Watts steam engine
Steam tractor
9
Initial Effects of IR
  • No more commando for lower class
  • Wages of weavers went up
  • Threat to handcraft workers
  • Early factories resembled poor houses - thus
    child labor

10
Initial Effects cont.
  • Railroad - iron and coal complimented to expand
    both industries
  • New labor class willing to move
  • Cheaper faster goods - more markets - reinvest
    capital - self perpetuating
  • Change to daily life - cottage to factory whistle

11
Impact of Railroads
12
Continent after 1815
  • Great Britain would lead the way up til WWI when
    finally U.S. and Germany passed
  • Continent had been consumed by French Rev and
    Napoleon
  • No free trade - tariffs toll stations on rivers
    drove prices up
  • Not as willing as Brits to risk capital
    (conservatism)

13
The continent takes a different path
  • 1) borrowed techniques practices from British
  • John Cockerill - Belgium
  • Fritz Harkort - Germany
  • 2) Gov influence - tariffs
  • France - high tariffs
  • Germany - Zollverein - tariff union
  • 3) Join-Stock Banks - Credit Mobilier in France

14
Social Implications
  • 1) Urbanization
  • 2) Struggle between labor capital
  • 3) Working conditions
  • 4) Economics the dismal science
  • 5) Liberal reforms for workers
  • 6) rise in standard of living

15
Urbanization
  • 50 of Brits livied in cities by 1850
  • Miserable conditions - sanitation chief concern
  • Edwin Chadwick - reformer outlining probs
  • 1848 Public Health Act

16
Labor v. Capital
  • New group of factory owners and ind capitalists
    increase wealth of middle class
  • New social relations - economic classes
  • Haves and have-nots (proletariat)
  • Marx - class consciousness

17
Working Conditions
  • Unsafe, long hours (12 hr shifts)
  • Sexual division of labor (less jobs women/paid
    less)
  • Womans biological clock
  • Balance work with running a home
  • patriarchal tradition

18
Dismal Science
  • Modern Capitalism - Adam Smith Invisible Hand
  • Thomas Malthus - pop will outpace food supply to
    be checked by natural forces - poor should have
    less kids
  • David Ricardo - Iron Law of Wages
  • When wages are high, workers have more kids
  • More children create a labor surplus that depress
    wages

19
Liberal Reforms
  • Robert Owen attempted unsuccessfully to organize
    a nationalized trade union
  • Luddites - skilled craftspeople that attacked and
    damaged machines
  • Chartism - organized workers in Britain demanding
    universal male suffrage 1840s

20
Liberal Reforms
  • Factory Act of 1833 - 8 hr day kids 9-13, 12 hrs
    kids 13-18
  • Ten Hours Act - 13-18 10 hrs and women included

21
Rise in Standard of Living?
  • No doubt early years tough for workers
  • How do we quantify? Wages, employment, purchasing
    power
  • Real wages increase after 1820
  • No good stats on unemployment
  • Av person earned/consumed 50 more in 1850 than
    1770
  • Real winners middle class
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