What can we learn from the policies that spurred the Industrial Revolution?
Some of the dominant policy issues of
today – immigration, energy, the emergence of China – have their
analogues in the great Industrial Revolution. The key government policies that
laid the foundation for the Industrial Revolution in England include supporting the immigration of skilled workers, allowing for private ownership of farm land, weakening the unions of
the day (the guilds), and addressing the energy crisis (in charcoal). And contrary policies in Italy and Spain
– countries that were far wealthier and advanced than was
pre-Industrial Revolution England – derailed a similar
revolution from occurring in continental Europe.
England would not have been anyone's first bet as the cradle of the Industrial Revolution. When compared to the developed countries of the time, such as Italy, the Netherlands, France, and Germany, sixteenth century England was an also-ran, and had fewer than 4 million inhabitants, compared to 15 million in France, 11 million in Italy, and 7 million in Spain. We all know the key innovations and developments that sparked the Industrial Revolution:
England would not have been anyone's first bet as the cradle of the Industrial Revolution. When compared to the developed countries of the time, such as Italy, the Netherlands, France, and Germany, sixteenth century England was an also-ran, and had fewer than 4 million inhabitants, compared to 15 million in France, 11 million in Italy, and 7 million in Spain. We all know the key innovations and developments that sparked the Industrial Revolution:
Textiles.
For centuries preceding the Industrial Revolution England
produced the best wool in Europe, and from the fourteenth century
onward moved more and more into the production of woolen cloth.
Wool and woolen cloth represented the bulk of English exports. Four
inventions mechanized textile manufacturing and ushered in the
Industrial Revolution: the spinning-jenny, patented by Hargreaves in
1770; the water frame, invented by Arkwright in 1769; Crompton's mule
introduced in 1779; and the self-acting mule, which was brought into
use until Roberts improved it in 1825. The most famous invention of
all, patented by Cartwright in 1785, was the power-loom. And add to
these a critical one from America: the cotton gin.
Coal and Iron.
Meanwhile, the iron industry had been equally revolutionized
by the invention of smelting by pit-coal brought into use between
1740 and 1750, and by the application in 1788 of the steam-engine to
blast furnaces. In the eight years that followed,
the amount of iron manufactured nearly doubled. Improvements were
introduced in puddling, rolling, and other processes. The production
of coal increased more than proportionately. The smelting of iron and
the use of the steam-engine created fresh demand for coal, so capital
and innovation extended to mining, leading to steam pumps, timber
roof supports, and safety lamps.
The
factory system.
Prior to the Industrial Revolution, manufacturing was organized
according to the "domestic system". Manufacturing was
carried on in houses by a master working with a few journeymen and
apprentices, usually in country villages. The implements of
manufacture belonged to the master. The raw material—wool, linen,
metal, or whatever —was the property of a town merchant or
capitalist, who distributed it to the manufacturers in their houses
in the villages, paying them for the product and then selling or
exporting it. The power spinning machines were too
large to be used in a house and required a large scale power plant.
As a result, the Industrial Revolution led to an increase in the size
of plants and a resulting concentration of labor and capital into
centralized production centers. Shipbuilding, textile manufacture and
the like required plants worth millions of pounds with hundreds of
workers. Manufacturing thus moved from the traditional domestic or
guild system to what became known as the factory system.
The factory system brought with it capital-intensive production
methods, power, and regimented laborer.
Less discussed are the government policies that provided the foundation and then nurtured these innovations:
Investing in
infrastructure
The roads in England were in terrible
condition at the start of the Industrial Revolution. It took a week
or more for a coach to go from London to Edinburgh. Ruts were four
feet deep, hardly a mile could be passed without seeing carts broken
down.
Infrastructure projects, both by
private turnpike companies and by public authorities, covered England
with good roads. And even more important that the roads was the
development of the infrastructure of the waterways. The first canal
was completed in 1761, and within a few years a system of canals gave
ready transportation for goods through all parts of the country. The
investment in infrastructure, augmented by the introduction of steam
engines for both rail and boats, was one of the most critical
foundations for expansion of the Industrial Revolution, and indeed
for the nineteenth century in general.
Opening
immigration for skilled workers
Another policy that enhanced England’s
position for industrialization was the influx of skilled immigrant.
Persecution in France and Spain and economic difficulties in Spain
and elsewhere drove people to more hospitable countries, with England
at the top of the list. This immigration was not merely an infusion
of labor, but of skilled labor that brought with it new methods of
production: Flemish cloth; Walloon weavers, thread-makers and iron
smiths; French Huguenots silk-weavers; clocks and metal goods from
Normandy and Brittany; Spanish needles; Venetian glass; fine milled
paper from Germany.
Not surprisingly, the immigrants were
frequently harassed by English craftsmen, who saw in them as potentially dangerous competitors. But the Crown had policies to protect
them, and ultimately the English craftsmen learned their techniques
and often improved them.
Weakening the
guilds
The influx of immigrants could only
benefit England to the extent they were allowed to ply their trades.
The English government put policies in place that assured this. In
England the government – through the action of the Crown – did
not permit restrictive practices of the crafts guilds In the cities,
guilds also weakened because of the domination of the mercantile
class, which controlled the market and the raw material of the
craftsmen. Many immigrants did not stay in the cities, because once
in the countryside the power of the guilds was dampened further.
In contrast to England, where
manufacturing escaped from the controls of the city guilds, thereby
allowing skilled immigrant, in Italy the guilds remained dominant,
thwarting the few attempts to introduce innovations. Manufacturing remained stagnant in Italy, entrenched in the past. The
result was a gradual replacement of Italian goods and services by
foreign ones because the English – along with the Dutch and the
French – could offer lower prices due to their innovations in
production. Italian products were of a higher quality, but Italian
manufacturers were constrained by guild regulations to use less
efficient, traditional methods. The English and the Dutch swamped the
textile market. Their products were inferior, lighter and less durable
than the Italian products, but they cost a good deal less.
And not only did Italy lag in
efficiencies of production. The guilds led to higher labor costs.
Competition lowered wages outside Italy; while within Italy the guild
organization kept wages up. At
the beginning of the seventeenth century, Italian wages were out of
step with wages in other countries. As a result there was a marked
decline in Italian exports along with reduced investment in
manufacturing and shipping.
Establishing private agricultural land
Traditionally the agricultural land in England was largely held in commons. Towards
the late 1600's the government enacted laws that permitted enclosures, effectively privatizing land. Enclosing agricultural lands
provided a scale of production and a level of control by the owners
that led the to radically improved the efficiency of agricultural production.
Rotation of crops, better fertilizers, drainage, breeding of better
livestock (by one contemporary estimate, between the early and late
1700s black cattle increased from 370 pounds to 800 pounds, and sheep
from 28 pounds to 80 pounds), were among the characteristics
of the new farming, and these were practical only to those who had
some capital, knowledge, and enterprise – all of which came more
naturally to larger tracts of land under private ownership.
These improvements led to a cascade of
further consolidation because those who continued to work the small
farms could not compete and so sold them to neighboring landowners
who had already created a production edge through earlier
consolidation.
As
with most of the other policies, enclosures came with its social
costs. A popular piece of doggerel declared that:
The
law locks up the man or woman
Who steals the goose from off the common;
But leaves the greater villain loose
Who steals the common from the goose."
Who steals the goose from off the common;
But leaves the greater villain loose
Who steals the common from the goose."
Nonetheless, the resulting agricultural revolution
played a large part in the industrial revolution. Not only in terms
of the production of food to fuel the labor, but in the flow of
farmers into the industrial sector.
Overcoming
the energy crisis by forcing a move to new energy sources
The Industrial Revolution can be viewed
as the control and redirection of energy toward production. But early
on this was stymied because of deforestation and the resulting shortage of the primary fuel of the
time: charcoal. To give an idea of the shortage, as early as the
1500's and into the 1600's the price of oak (primarily used in
shipbuilding) rose twelve-fold, and the price of timber for charcoal
increased five-fold.
In the sixteenth century England
ordered a governmental inquiry into timber wastage and deforestation
and then instituted a number of Acts of Parliament to suppress the
cutting of timber for industrial purposes. As a result, foundries
were forced to reduce their activities and England began to use coal
for heating and in industrial processes. People were wary of the
toxic fumes, but had no alternative. The transport of coal by sea
from Newcastle to London increased from 35,000 is 1550 to 560,000
tons a century late. By 1738 a French traveler wrote that coal was
"the soul of all English Industries."
As it turned out, this energy crisis,
by forcing a move toward coal (and helped in that regard by the fact
that England was relatively sparsely populated by forests in the
first place but was abundant in coal), ended up helping to push England
down the road towards industrialization.
Bringing in capital
Capital had not existed in any large
amounts in medieval England, and even in the later centuries there
was no group that focused on investing capital into industry.
Agriculture and manufacturing were carried on with very small capital, usually the capital each farmer, artisan, or merchant might
have of his own. There was no use of credit either from individuals
or from banks for industrial development.
But capital was required to buy the new
machinery at the heart of the industrial age. These machines were far
too expensive for the old cottage weavers. Capital therefore had to
be brought into manufacturing. This capital came from various
directions.
Capital from Privateering
Privateering, also known as
commerce-raiding, was basically government-sanctioned piracy. Strange
as it may seem, with the development of England's seafaring
capability and the flow of precious cargo from the Americas,
privateering became an important source of capital accumulation in
England. Indeed, in the three years following the defeat of the
Spanish Armada in 1588, over two hundred English ships were involved
in privateering, and over three hundred foreign ships were captured.
Capital from Spain
Meanwhile, Spain, which had an early
lead on capital because of the influx of American treasure, enjoyed a
period of splendor and economic superiority but lacked the human capital due to a cultural antipathy, even prejudice
toward productive labor, to put that capital to good use.
So Spanish merchants turned to foreign producers and provided their capital to the foreign enterprises. A Venetian ambassador remarked, "Spain cannot exist unless relieved by others, nor can the rest of the world exist without the money of Spain."
So Spanish merchants turned to foreign producers and provided their capital to the foreign enterprises. A Venetian ambassador remarked, "Spain cannot exist unless relieved by others, nor can the rest of the world exist without the money of Spain."
The capital from the Americas thus
provided Spain with purchasing power but ultimately stimulated the
development of Holland, England, France, and other European
countries.This prosperity, easily funded but
inevitably of limited duration, led many to abandon farming and to
regard craft and mercantile activities as menial occupations. Instead
resources poured into the academies, whose product occupied the
clergy and the increasingly bloated government bureaucracy rather
than productive industry – and disguised structural unemployment as
well.
In 1675 Alfonso Nuñez de Castro wrote:
Let London manufacture those fabrics of
hers to her heart's content; Holland her chambrays; Florence her
cloth; the Indies their beaver and vicuna; Milan her brocades; Italy
and Flanders their linens, so long as our capital can enjoy them; the
only thing it proves is that all nations train journeymen for Madrid
and that Madrid is the queen of Parliaments, for all the world serves
her and she serves nobody.
In short, seventeenth century Spain
lacked entrepreneurs and artisans but had an overabundance of
bureaucrats, lawyers. As England was building the foundation for the
industrial revolution, easy-come-easy-go Spain provided capital even
as it sank into decline.
Capital from rescinding
primogeniture
The economic way of life in medieval
England was framed by two economic realities: Virtually all wealth
was in the form of land, and the land could not be sold. Wealth was
held in land even up to the seventeenth century it was the universal
outlet for savings in England-primarily because there were not many
alternative investments. As late as the sixteenth century, more than
80 percent of production was based on agriculture. What limited
industry there was bore little resemblance to the Industrial Age that
would follow centuries later. Some towns had specialized
industry-brewing, salt making, iron working, paper mills-but this was
still not characteristic of the economy as a whole. And because land
was the preponderant store of wealth, it was also the source of
social stature and political power. A large landed estate gave its
owner great local influence in controlling elections and sharing in
patronage and opened the door for him to join the gentry.
As early as the time of the Norman
Conquest in 1066, land could not be sold or even used as collateral
for a loan because feudal lords exchanged it for a knight's military
service. A knight could no more transfer his land than he could pass
on his military obligation. This this limitation on the right to
transfer land carried the weight of law because of another import
into England: primogeniture. Landholders had a right to their land
only for the course of their lives, after which the deed was
transferred according to the rules of primogeniture, which meant it
generally passed to the oldest son.
The cost of
having capital be literally land-locked capital became increasingly
apparent on a practical level as new avenues for wealth and
investment opened up. The development of overseas commerce and the
increasing involvement of leading merchants in the lucrative business
of lending money to the government expanded investment opportunities.
Finally, there were prospects for building fortunes apart from land
ownership. The landed gentry had an incentive to extract the wealth
from their land to pursue other opportunities, so various artifices
were used to circumvent primogeniture.`
The new-found liquidity in the land
progressed during the Tudor and early Stuart reigns, resulting in the
rapid growth and independence of the English gentry and their
servants. Now that land could be used as collateral, it opened up new
possibilities for borrowing and lending. An embryonic capital market
developed in London, and by the seventeenth century in other cites as
well. The end of primogeniture thus helped allow capital to find its
way into financing the emerging opportunities of the Industrial
Revolution.
Breaking down class barriers for artisans and engineers
In the Middle Ages, science and
technology were separate and distinct. Science was philosophy;
technology was craft. Science had no interest in
technological affairs, and technological developments were the fruits
of uneducated artisans. For example, physicians viewed themselves as
scientists and philosophers, and so had nothing to do with the
surgeons, who were considered technicians and simple artisans.
But developments in ocean navigation,
in the watch and clock industry, and in experimental science required
increasing numbers of precision instruments which in turn led to a
new, superior sort of technician who could interact with the
scientists, with both the technician and the scientist engaged in similar problems. It required an
elevation in the status of the artisans, engineers and skilled
workers, and a partnership between these occupations and the more
elite and lettered of science and philosophy.
This interaction between the philosopher-scientist and the artisan was promoted by so august a body as The Royal Society of London, which
charged some of its members with compiling a history of
artisan trades and techniques.
This new attitude, an
attitude toward science that placed pragmatism before idealism,
that applied mathematics to explaining the real world, and that introduced
experimentation and empiricism (along with statistical methods –
the experimenters of the seventeenth century endlessly recorded,
cataloged, and counted) as an integral part of the scientific
process, underlies the inventions of the Industrial Revolution. The willingness to have science deal with
the practical rather than the philosophical, to solve the concrete
problems of production, and to team up with the skilled artisans –
a partnership across class lines that was unique to England -- was critical for the technological developments behind the Industrial
Revolution.
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