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The Industrial Revolution: Birth of Modern Economic Growth and Skepticism Towards its Sustainability. Gabriel Söderberg, Department of Economic History , Uppsala University. This lecture. T he Industrial Revolution: - What was its core ? - How did it change the world ?
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The Industrial Revolution: Birthof Modern EconomicGrowth and Skepticism TowardsitsSustainability Gabriel Söderberg, DepartmentofEconomicHistory, Uppsala University
Thislecture • The Industrial Revolution: • - Whatwasitscore? • - Howdid it change the world? • - Howdoes it affectus? • Skepticism towardsitssustainability: • - Early proponents • - End of skepticism during 20th century and returnaround the 1970s • - Relevanceofquestiontoday – withyourhelp
Whatwas the Industrial Revolution? • England 1760-1830 • Replacementoforganicenergy (wood, animals, human work), water and windwith fossil energy • Replacementof human workwithmachines • Enormousincrease in productivity • Enormousincrese in useofnaturalresources
Breaking the Energy Barrier • Factoriesclosetoenergysources: water, wood lands • Transitionto fossil fuelthrough a numberoftechnological innovations • Expensivelabor incentives for machines • Problems withcoal mining: water in tunnels steamengine for betterpumping morecoal • Coal: portable, extremelycompact factoriescan be set upanywhere • Coal as energy, iron as material better transport increasedworldtrade
”The Dismal Science” Thomas Malthus 1766-1834 David Ricardo 1772-1823
Malthus • Humans must havefood + foodsupplyincreasesslowly + humans cannotcontroltheirreproduction = Population willgrow faster thanfoodsupply • Increasedfoodsupplyincreasedpopulationreturn of misery optimists are wrong • Constrainingfactor: agricultural technology
Ricardo • Growth not possible in the longrun – stationarystate • Diminishingreturn of the soilmoreexpensivefoodhigherwages less profits less investmentsend of growth • Twoways to counter this: technology and freetrade - technology not to be trustedfreetrade as ideal partlyexplained be technology pessimism!!
”The Golden Age” 1945-1970 • Time of great optimism, reduction of inequality, increase in general welfare for the masses, large and stableeconomicgrowth • Technology and science widely accepted as the driving force • The optimism of the Enlightenment and modernity is mixed witheconomictheory
Post-War Technology Optimism Simon Kuznets 1901-1985 Robert Solow 1924-
Technology and science important… • The reason for economicgrowthis:”…thevastincrease in the stock of usefulknowledge…the underlying capacity of the knowledge transmitted to control production processes, the emergence of experimental science and the empirical outlook which, building upon past attainments of mankind, provided the indispensible basis for modern economic growth” – Kuznets 1965
…but taken for granted. • The Solowmodel (1956): Y=A+K+L A=Y-K-L technologicaldevelopment is the thingleft! • The mostimportantfactor, but is leftunexplained in the model! • Technologicaldevelopment is taken for granted, ”a gift” from public funding of science
Worsetimes… • 1970s: oilcrisis, stagnantgrowth, ideological and theoreticalshift • Crisis of values: growthquestioned, environmental movementskepticalabouteternalgrowth
Club of Romefounded 1968 • ”Limits to Growth” (1972) – population growth and consumptionneeds to be reduced; sells in 12 million copies, in 30 languages • Solow’sCriticism: ” "The authors load their case by letting some things grow exponentially and others not. Population, capital and pollution grow exponentially in all models, but technologies for expanding resources and controlling pollution are permitted to grow, if at all, only in discrete increments."
Returnofgrowth (pre-2008) • Pro market shift in ideology and economictheory • Financialderegulations, innovations • Increasedglobalization • Chineseindustrialization cheapconsumergoods
Present day • Financialcrisis part of end ofgrowth? • - Yes: No growthopportunity capital goes intofinancial assets buildingbubbles • -No: Depressions natural part ofindustrialsociety, followed by new growth • Yes: Environmental problems and depletionofoilwill stop growth • No: Science and technologycloseto major breakthroughs
Close todebatearound 1800 Questions and comments?