Top Banner
Economics Review
42

Economics Review. The Commercial Revolution and the Columbian Exchange (Sixteenth Century)

Mar 26, 2015

Download

Documents

Robert Waddell
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Economics Review. The Commercial Revolution and the Columbian Exchange (Sixteenth Century)

Economics Review

Page 2: Economics Review. The Commercial Revolution and the Columbian Exchange (Sixteenth Century)

The Commercial Revolution and the Columbian Exchange

(Sixteenth Century)

Page 3: Economics Review. The Commercial Revolution and the Columbian Exchange (Sixteenth Century)

What is the Commercial Revolution?

• “The shift from a town-centered economy to a nation-centered economy.”

• The emergence of commercial capitalism

Page 4: Economics Review. The Commercial Revolution and the Columbian Exchange (Sixteenth Century)

Causes

• Population increase– Europe in 1600: 90 million people

• 20 million of those added in the 16th Century

• Inflation– Devaluing of currency– Prices go up, wages go down

• Actually helped emerging entrepreneurs

Page 5: Economics Review. The Commercial Revolution and the Columbian Exchange (Sixteenth Century)

Emerging Capitalism

• “Putting out” system• New Monarchies• New banking systems

– “commercial capitalism”

• Capital and labor• Mercantilism

– “favorable balance of trade”– “bullionism”– Self-sufficiency– Role of the government

Page 6: Economics Review. The Commercial Revolution and the Columbian Exchange (Sixteenth Century)

The “Price Revolution”

• Population growth + rise in inflation

• Spain and the New World

• The Columbian Exchange– From the New World– To the New World– Results for Europeans– Results for Native Americans

Page 7: Economics Review. The Commercial Revolution and the Columbian Exchange (Sixteenth Century)

The Cottage Industry(a.k.a. “putting out system”)

Pros• Avoided guilds• Helped farmers

supplement income• Created

entrepreneurs• Created new

consumer goods• Work could be done

at home

Cons• Inefficient

– Workers spread out in many places

– Labor wasn’t coordinated and organized

– Lack of capital

Page 8: Economics Review. The Commercial Revolution and the Columbian Exchange (Sixteenth Century)

The Physiocrats

• Francois Quesnay (1694-1774)

• Pierre Dupont de Nemours (1739-1817)

• Anti-mercantilism

• Anti-regulation

• Concerned with agriculture

• Government’s role: protect property and enforce laws

Page 9: Economics Review. The Commercial Revolution and the Columbian Exchange (Sixteenth Century)

The Economics of the Industrial Revolution

“Classical Economics”

Page 10: Economics Review. The Commercial Revolution and the Columbian Exchange (Sixteenth Century)

Adam Smith

• Laissez-faire capitalism– Competition– Self-interest– Division of Labor

Page 11: Economics Review. The Commercial Revolution and the Columbian Exchange (Sixteenth Century)

Supply and DemandThe “Free Market”

Page 12: Economics Review. The Commercial Revolution and the Columbian Exchange (Sixteenth Century)

Thomas Malthus (1766-1834)

• An Essay on the Principle of Population (1798)

• Population will outgrow the food supply

• Advocated a laissez-faire approach– Don’t help the poor

Page 13: Economics Review. The Commercial Revolution and the Columbian Exchange (Sixteenth Century)

David Ricardo (1772-1823)

• The “Iron Law of Wages”

• Wages will always be at a subsistence level

Page 14: Economics Review. The Commercial Revolution and the Columbian Exchange (Sixteenth Century)

The “Utopian Socialists”

Page 15: Economics Review. The Commercial Revolution and the Columbian Exchange (Sixteenth Century)

Robert Owen (1771-1858)

• “Paternalistic Capitalism”

• New Harmony, Indiana

Page 16: Economics Review. The Commercial Revolution and the Columbian Exchange (Sixteenth Century)

Count de Saint Simon (1760-1825)

• Founder of French Socialism

• Public ownership of industrial capital

• Goal of society: improve conditions of the poor

Page 17: Economics Review. The Commercial Revolution and the Columbian Exchange (Sixteenth Century)

Charles Fourier (1772-1837)

• Poverty is the cause of all social problems

• Social communities– “Phalanxes”

Page 18: Economics Review. The Commercial Revolution and the Columbian Exchange (Sixteenth Century)

The Utilitarians

• John Stuart Mill

• Jeremy Bentham

• “The Greatest Good for the Greatest Number”

Page 19: Economics Review. The Commercial Revolution and the Columbian Exchange (Sixteenth Century)

Louis Blanc (1811-1882)

• “Social Workshops”– Goal: out-compete

private industries

• Played a role in the 1848 Revolution

Page 20: Economics Review. The Commercial Revolution and the Columbian Exchange (Sixteenth Century)

“Scientific” Socialism

Page 21: Economics Review. The Commercial Revolution and the Columbian Exchange (Sixteenth Century)

Karl Marx (1818-1883) and Friedrich Engels (1820-1893)

Page 22: Economics Review. The Commercial Revolution and the Columbian Exchange (Sixteenth Century)

The Communist Manifesto (1848)Das Kapital (1867)

Page 23: Economics Review. The Commercial Revolution and the Columbian Exchange (Sixteenth Century)

Main Ideas

• Class conflict

• Impact of Industrialization– Alienation– Labor Theory of Value

• Dialectical Materialism– Hegel’s dialectic “turned on its head”– An inevitable historical process (hence

“scientific socialism”)

Page 24: Economics Review. The Commercial Revolution and the Columbian Exchange (Sixteenth Century)

Thesis Antithesis

Synthesis

(New Thesis)Antithesis

Synthesis

(New Thesis)Antithesis

ABSOLUTE IDEA

The Ultimate Synthesis(Eventually)

ALL OF THIS FUNCTIONS IN THE REALM OF

IDEAS FOR HEGEL

Page 25: Economics Review. The Commercial Revolution and the Columbian Exchange (Sixteenth Century)

Master Slave

Nobility Peasants

Bourgeoisie Proletariat

COMMUNISM

The Ultimate Synthesis(Eventually)

ALL OF THIS FUNCTIONS IN THE REALM OF

ECONOMICS FOR MARX

F E U D A L I S M

C A P I T A L I S M

Page 26: Economics Review. The Commercial Revolution and the Columbian Exchange (Sixteenth Century)

“Dialectical Materialism”

• Marx framed this in economics• CLASS CONFLICT• Stages of history (these are scientific)

1. Primitive communism2. Slavery3. Feudalism4. Capitalism5. Communism

• “It is not the consciousness of humans which determines their being. It is their social being which determines their consciousness.”

Page 27: Economics Review. The Commercial Revolution and the Columbian Exchange (Sixteenth Century)

Socialism After 1870• The First International (1864-1876)• Trade Unions

– Legal in Britain, 1871– Legal in France, 1884– Most powerful in Germany

• “Revisionist” Socialism– Jean Jaures (France, 1859-1914)– Eduard Bernstein (Germany, 1850-1932)– The Erfurt Program (Germany, 1891)

• Improve lives of workers, not work for revolution– The Fabian Society (England, 1884)– The Labor Party (England, 1906)

• The Second International (1889-1916)– Denounced “opportunism”

• Bolshevism and Leninism – Changes to Marxism

Page 28: Economics Review. The Commercial Revolution and the Columbian Exchange (Sixteenth Century)

Sample Essay Questions

Page 29: Economics Review. The Commercial Revolution and the Columbian Exchange (Sixteenth Century)

Describe and compare the differences among Utopian socialists, Karl Marx, and Revisionist Socialists in their critiques of 19th century European economy and society.

Page 30: Economics Review. The Commercial Revolution and the Columbian Exchange (Sixteenth Century)

“In the 15th century, European society was still centered on the Mediterranean region, but by the end of the 17th century, the focus of Europe had shifted north”

Identify and analyze the economic developments between 1450 and 1700 that helped bring about this shift.

Page 31: Economics Review. The Commercial Revolution and the Columbian Exchange (Sixteenth Century)

How and in what ways were economic and political factors responsible for intensifying European imperialist activity in Africa from the mid-19th century to the beginning of the First World War?

Page 32: Economics Review. The Commercial Revolution and the Columbian Exchange (Sixteenth Century)

Analyze changes in the European economy from 1450 to 1700 brought about by the voyages of exploration and by colonization. Give specific examples.

Page 33: Economics Review. The Commercial Revolution and the Columbian Exchange (Sixteenth Century)

Describe and analyze the issues and ideas in the debate in Europe between 1750 and 1846 over the proper role of government in the economy. Give specific examples.

Page 34: Economics Review. The Commercial Revolution and the Columbian Exchange (Sixteenth Century)

Analyze the common political and economic problems facing Western European nations in the period 1945-1960 and discuss their responses to these problems.

Page 35: Economics Review. The Commercial Revolution and the Columbian Exchange (Sixteenth Century)

Analyze the influence of the theory of mercantilism on the domestic and foreign policies of France, 1600-1715.

Page 36: Economics Review. The Commercial Revolution and the Columbian Exchange (Sixteenth Century)

Analyze the key developments that characterized the European economy in the second half of the nineteenth century.

Page 37: Economics Review. The Commercial Revolution and the Columbian Exchange (Sixteenth Century)

Both Jean-Baptiste Colbert (1619-1683) and Adam Smith (1723-1790) sought to increase the wealth of their respective countries. How did their recommendations differ?

Page 38: Economics Review. The Commercial Revolution and the Columbian Exchange (Sixteenth Century)

Explain the reasons for the rise of the Netherlands as a leading commercial power in the period 1550-1650.

Page 39: Economics Review. The Commercial Revolution and the Columbian Exchange (Sixteenth Century)

Discuss the economic policies and institutions that characterized mercantilist systems from 1600-1800.

Page 40: Economics Review. The Commercial Revolution and the Columbian Exchange (Sixteenth Century)

How and to what extent did the Commercial Revolution transform the European economy and diplomatic balance of power in the period 1650-1763?

Page 41: Economics Review. The Commercial Revolution and the Columbian Exchange (Sixteenth Century)

Describe and analyze economic policies in Eastern and Western Europe after 1945.

Page 42: Economics Review. The Commercial Revolution and the Columbian Exchange (Sixteenth Century)

Compare and contrast the social and economic roles of the state in seventeenth and eighteenth century Europe (before 1789) to the social and economic roles of the state in Europe after the Second World War.