European Tribune

The Industrial Revolution Unplugged: An Interview With Author Gregory Clark

by Intrepid Liberal Journal
Tue Oct 2nd, 2007 at 03:27:46 AM EST

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The topic below was originally posted in my blog the Intrepid Liberal Journal as well as the Independent Bloggers Alliance, The Peace Tree and Worldwide Sawdust.

Our current world of globalization, technological advancement and the widening schism between rich and poor stems from the Industrial Revolution. Indeed, the Industrial Revolution is arguably the most important historical watershed in human history. So why did it happen in eighteenth-century England? Furthermore, how come the unprecedented economic growth it produced only served to make parts of the world even poorer?

An excellent interview and a new, controversial view of economic history — promoted by Migeru


Conventional wisdom is that the Industrial Revolution resulted from the development of stable, political, legal and economic institutions in seventeenth-century Europe. Many assume factors such as geography, natural resources or exploitation were behind the Industrial Revolution. A decade ago, Jared Diamond postulated in his best selling and Pulitzer prize winning book, <u>Guns, Germs, and Steel: The Fates of Human Societies</u>, that natural endowments such as geography were largely responsible for differences in the wealth of nations.

Gregory Clark, a professor of economics at the University of California, Davis as well as department Chair, is posing a direct challenge to Diamond and our longstanding belief of why the Industrial Revolution happened. In his recently published book, <u>A Farewell To Alms: A Brief Economic History of the World </u>(Princeton University Press), Clark contends that culture not imperialism or geography explains the wealth and poverty of nations.

His provocative book has garnered much attention and provoked considerable debate. Tyler Cowen of the New York Times wrote late last year that,

"Professor Clark's idea-rich book may just prove to be the next blockbuster in economics. He offers us a daring story of the economic foundations of good institutions and the climb out of recurring poverty. We may not have cracked the mystery of human progress, but `A Farewell to Alms' brings us closer than before."

Still others take issue with Clark's suggestion that culture is far more influential than institutions in generating economic growth. In a New York Times review in August, Robert P. Brenner, a historian at the University of California, Los Angeles is quoted as referring to Clark's idea of genes for capitalist behavior as a "speculative leap."

Prior to even reading Clark's book, conservative Andrew Sullivan wrote the following for his blog in August,

"Conservatism has long posited that human nature has no history. But what if it does? What if genetic adaptation occurs more swiftly among humans than we once believed? This implies that human nature is actually more plastic than we have long thought - but generationally, not individually. It suggests that different populations may have not just different cultural but different genetic inclinations. It means that some populations may therefore have different skill-sets than others, and even different aptitudes with respect to complex systems like, liberal democracy, that require specific habits of mind and custom. It means that these facts about human societies across the globe may be somewhat stubborn things in the short term, if not in the long.

If these ideas undermine parts of conservatism (its belief in unchanging human nature in history), they also entrench others (that societies cannot be abstracted from their moment in time or culture). These ideas also suggest, of course, that a place like, say, Iraq, will not soon muster anything like the skills and practices for a Western European democracy. These are my wild-eyed inferences from a book I have not yet read."

Yet Clark's book is also a difficult pill to swallow for liberals idealists like me who believe in activism to promote peace, justice and prosperity on a global scale. Personally, I believe factors beyond culture such as natural resources, geography and hostile neighbors are largely responsible for defining cultures. Hence, I further believe that activism is required to help influence those factors that shape cultures and hopefully facilitate worldwide prosperity and social justice.

Putting my own misgivings about some of his conclusions aside, Clark's book is compelling, scrupulously sourced and contains an abundance of remarkable facts. Clark graciously agreed to a telephone interview with me about his book. Below is a transcript of our conversation.


__


ILJ: Professor before we delve into the substance of your book let's talk about why you embarked on this project in the first place. Why is it so important to establish why the Industrial Revolution happened?

Clark: Well, the industrial revolution is actually one of those amazing puzzles of world history. And it's something that's up there with things like String Theory in physics and quasars in astronomy. It's how we got here. It's how we have the modern world. And the puzzle is why did it occur only 200 years ago when people were around for at least a hundred thousand years before that? One of the reasons it was fun to write this book is that you could actually explain this puzzle in terms that any intelligent person can understand and let them see why it is such an amazing puzzle about why history would take that particular form. Whereas with things like quantum mechanics I certainly know I'm never going to understand that stuff (laughs)!

ILJ: I'm curious as to how you compiled the impressive historical data you utilized. Whether one agrees with your arguments or not, and I'm skeptical about some of your conclusions, the information you accumulated whether it's last wills and testaments from men in the 1600s or pre-industrial fertility rates is quite astounding. I found myself transfixed by all the data presented in your charts and graphs. How did you obtain access to this data as well as economic surveys from hundreds of years ago?

Clark: Well, I'm a specialist in English economic history. And that's actually one of the countries that is the best documented, going way back to the middle ages. I've been working on this book for twelve years. I've been in this field for twenty-five years. And then the other thing is I actually love to read anthropology and that provided this whole other source of data. And then I've been teaching for the last fifteen years effectively world history courses. So the great thing is you gradually get exposed to more and more evidence and more and more materials. And what's nice about this particular history is this is a very obscure corner of the academic realm.

People are just not aware of how useful and interesting various bits of information we have from the past are. How we can estimate how literate the upper Roman classes were, or what was the speed of travel for information in the ancient world. We actually do know all these things so part of the fun of the book was to reveal to people that there is this amazing body of information about the past. So it's partly my own research and partly just drawing on this huge body of knowledge that scholars in economic history and anthropology have assembled.

ILJ: So you really were combining two disciplines: economics and anthropology?

Clark: Yeah, I've always had an interest in anthropology and also particularly in socio-biology. When I was in graduate school at Harvard I listened to all sorts of lectures from evolutionary anthropologists. So for me it was fun just to try and bring different types of evidence and arguments together in this book and expand people's idea of what economic history is about. It's more than just boring stuff about prices and wages.

ILJ: Professor, a reoccurring theme in your book, especially the first part of your book covering the pre-Industrial Revolution is what you term the Malthusian trap, named after Thomas Malthus who in 1798 wrote "An Essay On the Principle of Population." For the benefit of those who haven't read your book or the work of Thomas Malthus for that matter, what is the Malthusian trap?


Clark: Well here is an interesting piece of intellectual history. Malthus was writing just as the world he was describing was coming to an end. It's interesting that just as that world was ending he finally figured out its true nature. The problem with all societies prior to 1800 was that technological advance was very slow.

In a world with slow technological advances and unrestricted fertility (or at least very modestly restricted fertility), when technological advances occur living standards are increased in the short run. But those increased living standards result simply in fewer people dying and more people being born, and that drives up the population. With a fixed land endowment that just drives wages down back to some kind of subsistence level.

So in all of the world before 1800, technological advancements were absorbed into population growth. None of it got translated into any long-term increase of living standards. That's the Malthusian trap that existed before 1800. And that produced a topsy-turvy world in which all our intuitions about what is good for society turn out to be wrong.

ILJ: That leads to my next question. In Chapter five about life expectancy you note that the cultures in China and Japan respectively practiced superior hygiene then their European counterparts during the pre-industrial era. Did the Europeans, England especially, perversely benefit from inferior hygiene because their populations were kept down from plagues while the standard of living for those who survived, were enhanced?

Clark: Yes, this is one of the paradoxes of history and an example of why this book is meant to be bold and controversial. It's previously been known that England and the Netherlands had very high living standards compared to most pre-industrial societies in the eighteenth century. People have identified that with an idea of greater economic progress in those societies. What my book argues instead is that living standards were good there not because of any sophistication of their economies, but because of the nature of hygiene practices across different societies in the pre-industrial world.

For a country like Japan living standards were only 1/3 or ½ of those in Western Europe. But that was because in Japan people bathed every day, and they carefully separated human waste products from people. When they used human waste in agriculture they carefully treated it to eliminate bacteria. They swept the floors of their houses. They swept the streets. Japan was a very orderly, hygienic society. But that has the perverse effect in a Malthusian world that you can live, you can sustain the population, at a much lower subsistence level. Material consumption can be much less, yet people still survive, and enough children can be born that the population can be replenished in each generation.

Whereas if you look at pre-industrial Western Europe, these people lived truly filthy (laughs). Before 1800 in England, no one seems to have bathed! It was just a relatively rare activity. For example Samuel Pepys, who was a high English civil servant in the 1660s, kept a famously detailed diary for almost ten years. And he records every minutia of his life. That's why it's so fascinating for historians. In that entire time he records his wife having a bath once!

ILJ: Yes, it was like a big event! (laughs)

Clark: Yes, it's a notable event! And he actually notes that she "pretends to becoming clean (laughs). But we'll see how long that lasts!" And apparently she never again took another bath in this decade.

ILJ: (Laughs)

Clark: And she wouldn't let him come to bed with her that night because he was filthy. People didn't bathe. Another thing is that in cities like London, what did people do with human waste? They stored it in their basement until it was emptied every few months by the night soil men. So they're living on piles of shit in the richest areas of pre-industrial England. And Pepys again in his diary records going down into his basement when his neighbor's waste storage has overflowed, and he's stepping on turds!

It's just very interesting how little attention Europeans paid to hygiene and the book argues that everything in a Malthusian world that kills off the population - plagues, war, disease - actually ends up making the population richer because fewer people have to die because of the misery of every day life and material existence. We can actually see that English living standards in 1450 where double those of the 18th century even though there was much less technological advance. The reason for that is because the "Black Death" was raging across Europe in that period.

ILJ: Just to follow up on that, if I interpret the data you present correctly, those who survived, and you coined the phrase "survival of the richest" in your book, enjoyed a superior standard of living because there were less people to divide the wealth among and they passed that wealth onto their descendants. Your contending that passing on wealth to offspring facilitated a culture of patience because for them survival wasn't contingent upon immediate consumption. Do I have that right?

Clark: Yes. Pretty much. One of the implications of this Malthusian existence, and this is deeply embedded in this Malthusian picture of the world, is better economic conditions allow people to be more successful reproductively. Within any of these societies there is a huge range of living standards. There are very poor people and very rich people. Those rich people, because they enjoy so much better material consumption, should be able to produce many more surviving children. The way this happens is you have more living space, you have more food, more changes in clothing. You have cleaner water. So we would expect in this society we would have a Darwinian element. Only two children will survive to adulthood in any period of the pre-industrial world because the population can only change slowly. But amongst the rich you'll have many more than two children surviving. Among the poor, many fewer. And we can observe this process when reviewing 16th and 17th century England. It's a very strong process.

So the rich are taking over this society biologically. That leads to the question, does this get transmitted from one generation to the next? If you have the rich in one generation, are their children also likely to be rich? Are their children also likely to be successful economically and reproductively? It turns out we can show in England that's the case.

This raises the intriguing possibility that if the rich are different from the poor, either culturally or genetically, then this process may be gradually transforming society because the rich and their descendants are taking over all the positions in society. So if it was a genetic advantage the rich had, there may actually be genetic changes in this long Malthusian interval between the arrival of settled agriculture and the Industrial Revolution.

It turns out we have very clear evidence of changes in peoples preferences over this long pre-industrial interval. The example the book gives is that people were becoming more patient as the Industrial Revolution approached. The measure of patience in these pre-industrial societies is the interest rates? Because the interest rate tells you much you have to reward people to own land or own houses. How much do you have to pay them not to consume immediately, but instead own that asset and wait for future consumption? If you go back to ancient Babylon they had mortgage markets but the interest rates were typically twenty to twenty-five percent. If you go to medieval Europe their interest rates were ten to twelve percent for things like land. By the eve of the Industrial Revolution the return on land in England dropped to about four percent. So in the pre-industrial world interest rates seem to indicate the amount of patience people are exhibiting.

ILJ: One element of your book I found ironic is your challenge to Adam Smith, considered the founding father of capitalism, who in 1776 published The Real Wealth of Nations. Smith postulated that the rule of tyrants and their institutions undermined incentive for productivity because the ruling class ultimately confiscated any wealth that was produced. You contend that pre-industrial England had plenty of incentive for producers, such as limited government and low taxes, yet prosperity still wasn't generated. Hence, Smith who is identified with the ethos of limited government actually postulated that the ruling class can positively or negatively influence economic policy with activist government. Why do you believe Adam Smith was wrong about that?

Clark: Well, since I've published the book I've come under criticism from intellectual historians. So, I think what I should be careful to identify it's the modern image we have of what Smith was about, rather than Smith himself. I'm not a historian of economic thought, so what I mainly want to emphasize is the message we've taken from Smith, the Smith we've constructed.

Smith is regarded as arguing that growth results from getting the correct economic incentives, which results from getting the right set of economic institutions. That's really an incredibly strong founding principal of modern economics, the idea that people really are at base the same everywhere. If you can only get the incentives correct, then economic growth will result. So, the book strongly takes issue with that.

I'm saying that economists have had to construct a false history of the world. They've had to imagine a pre-industrial past that is, you know, a cross of Brave Heart and Monty Python's Holy Grail and all the bad movies about medieval England. An image of rape, and pillage, disorder and violence, and serfs groaning under the weight of the lords emerged about medieval England.

My knowledge of medieval history, and this is one of the areas I've studied in detail, shows that picture is just unsustainable. If the World Bank was to now score medieval England against modern economies in any objective way, in terms of what are the incentives for production and for innovation, medieval England would score much more highly than somewhere like modern Sweden - which is a very rich and successful society. One way that shows up is, for example, in the average government tax rate for medieval England? It's one percent. In low tax America we're closer to forty percent, and in places like Sweden they're even close to sixty percent in terms of how they're taking from any extra earnings of the average wage earner.

Medieval England had absolute price stability. It had almost no government debt. It had very strong security of property. People who invested in land in local villages, who needed a ten percent return in order to make that investment, had absolute property security. We can see through the course of 500 years that lots of these land plots were transferred properly from one legal owner to another. They had a free market. And they had huge incentives. If you produced you ate, if you didn't produce you starved. For example we can see from the records that in 1316-17, in the last great famine that England experienced, poor people died and the rich lived (laughs).

ILJ: (Laughs)

Clark: You had every incentive to acquire assets in this world. Assets could be the difference between life and death. And yet this was still a world with very, very slow economic growth. Almost none. So one of the things the book is saying is look, modern economics in some sense is a cult. It's like pre-modern medicine, where you keep repeating these same ineffective treatments. They keep failing. In the book I provide lots of other instances where good economic institutions are not associated with economic growth. That's why I'm saying there has to be some other thing required, and what the book is arguing is that there really are important cultural processes that take place before you get modern economic growth. If we neglect that we're never going to understand the true nature of economic growth. And so we really need to move away from incentive explanations, and what the book is saying is that history is illuminating about this and we really need to know more about that history.

ILJ: Now if I interpret your book correctly, it's your provocative contention that the industrial revolution happened in England ahead of Japan, China, India or her European rivals because of a cultural evolution instead of institutions established by the ruling class. Specifically this cultural evolution encompassed what we would term middle class or bourgeoisie values of thrift, hard work, nonviolence, negotiation and patience. Couldn't one argue however that what really gave the English a leg up on their rivals was their superiority at imperialism, colonization and subjugation of other peoples for their material benefit?

Clark: Well, it is absolutely the case that the English were very successful colonists in this area. But the book is at pains to stress that the Industrial Revolution was home grown. It is the result of people in England innovating, introducing new processes in a way that they did not do earlier, as a result of changes in the culture. Not as a result of better incentives. And the book does acknowledge that events outside England, particularly England's great access to food supplies from the Americas, its access to cotton from colonies, helped magnify that process. But the book strongly stresses that the break, the move toward higher productivity growth rates, is really a homegrown feature of England.

Further I go on to look at the relationship between England and India in the nineteenth century. India was England's great colony in this period. Everything the English did, they didn't mean it this way, but everything they did should have led to the industrialization of India. They were not systematically exploiting India. They were in fact offering India the enormous possibility of becoming the second great industrial power in the world. That didn't happen, but it wasn't because of anything the British did. It was because of what happened internally in India. Because of India's weak responses to the new incentives the British Empire offered. And so the book says look, it's not that the imperialists had any kind of good motives, it's not that we should admire them in anyway, but in the case of something like British imperialism, it was actually, if you believe modern economics, it was actually a force for rapid world economic development and that Britain gained very little directly from its colonies. Most of Britain's gains actually came from Britain's internal processes of economic change.

ILJ: It seems to me you have adroitly combined elements of the classic nature/nurture divide. You're contending that the intrinsic human characteristics of a growing economy were nurtured in England and became part of that society's DNA - that so called middle class values were passed on almost genetically. And then around eighteen hundred, after years of this cultural development, a critical mass was achieved and the industrial revolution happened. But wasn't pre-industrial Japan a civil society with laws and customs that resembled England's? Couldn't it be argued that England had advantages transcending culture over the Japanese such as a more powerful imperial empire? I know you're saying it's home grown and you do acknowledge in your book some of the outside cultural advantages England had. But couldn't one argue that those outside forces were even more powerful than what was homegrown since there was many parallels between Japanese and English society?

Clark: Oh yes. The interesting thing is that there were actually surprising parallels between England and Japan in this period. But what the book says, I want to emphasize, is that the Industrial Revolution was going to occur somewhere. There were a bunch of societies that all seemed to be moving in the same direction. One of them was going to achieve the breakthrough into modern industrial society. And there were element also of luck and accidents in that. But England on most of these dimensions was the society that had moved furthest along.

So if you compare England and Japan you can see similar kind of processes in England and Japan. But that Japan looks like England three hundred to four hundred years earlier. The book is contending that if England never had an Industrial Revolution, then likely somewhere like Japan within three hundred or four hundred years would've actually made that breakthrough towards a modern world. There were just accidents of British history that gave the English the lead, and one of them was that the demographic system in pre-industrial England really created an enormous reproductive advantage for the upper classes. In Japan, their demographic system only created a modest advantage for the Samurai class. Consequently, there wasn't the same kind of cascade downward into the merchants and mechanics ranks of the excess children of the upper classes that you get in someone like England. And so the book is still sympathetic to accident and contingency, but it's saying you can still see a pattern. Another feature of England is the incredible stability of the English economy. It's actually internally very boring from the Middle Ages on.

ILJ: (Laughs)

Clark: And that's one of the reasons England is so incredibly well documented is because nothing ever gets destroyed! (laughs)

ILJ: (Laughs)

Clark: Even the Civil War results in almost no destruction for the economy ... the Civil War of 1642. So one of the things this allows is for these basic demographic processes that are changing the composition of the English population to be much more rapid than in other societies where there is more disruption, invasion, chaos which disrupts these demographic processes. But the basic thing the book emphasizes is that this was a common trend across long settled agrarian pre-industrial societies. That China, Japan and England are not that different by the time you get to 1800 but England is further along in this process.

ILJ: Your postulating that only long established stable societies develop the necessary cultural characteristics for economic growth. It seems to me that a society's economic development is influenced by so many variables, such as geography, access to fresh water, whether or not a society has been conquered or how long they've been subjugated, profoundly influences whether or not that society develops the cultural characteristics needed for economic growth. For all the impressive data your presenting - and it should be noted that your peers do not dispute your data, they're very impressed by what you've done - isn't it a leap of logic to say that culture is the cause of economic growth instead of those variables determined by fate which influence culture? How can we really know if it's the chicken or the egg?

Clark: Oh yeah. This is always a problem. Again, to be clear the book is saying when we look at the modern world it's beginning to resemble again the world pre- 1800. The great actors of economic life are beginning to look like those of 1800. It's Europe and European offsprings. East Asia and East Asian offsprings that are becoming the world's great economic powers again, and that looks exactly like the world before 1800.

But the argument of the book is that was because the long histories of these societies gave them an enduring cultural advantage in terms of modern economic competition. The puzzle then that comes up is why did these societies have such long histories of agrarian settlement. That's when you might say that maybe Jared Diamond could be right in terms of saying geographical advantages these places had in the beginning gave them much longer access to settled agrarian society. And so when you come down to it, the book seems to be posing a mechanism by which these societies have an advantage that is completely different from the one that Jared Diamond suggests. But in the end, I will admit, you can still think geography played a role. But not current geography. Now it turns out we're in a world where most societies have equal access in terms of geography and the possibilities of economic growth. Maybe some landlocked African economies don't. But most, a huge number do have equal access now. But I am not denying there maybe geographical advantages in the distant past that may have moved groups from hunter gatherers to agrarian societies in Europe and in China much earlier than in other parts of the world.

ILJ: Fair enough. Professor Clark you've been very generous with your time. A final question if I may sir. Assuming all your conclusions about the importance of culture in facilitating the industrial revolution are correct, what lessons can we draw from history as we try to influence economic growth in the underdeveloped world in the 21st century?

Clark: Well, the lesson is unfortunately a little pessimistic. But I think one thing that is important is that for fifty years institutions like the World Bank have been applying the same kind of medicine. And it's like pre-industrial doctors, you try bloodletting, and when it doesn't work, you conclude let's do more bloodletting.

ILJ: (Laughs)

Clark: And there is this emphasis now, it seems, a very strong emphasis, on achieving good government in a bunch of African societies which really have a hard time maintaining Western style governments. But yet when you look you see someone like China growing very rapidly with a very corrupt government, terrible social institutions, and the rule of law really evaded on a massive scale (laughs).

ILJ: (Laughs)

Clark: And so when you see this you think maybe to focus all your energies on institutions is not the way to go. What the very clear problem, say, within these African societies, is that even inside production enterprises it's very hard to get people to cooperate in production in a way that makes workers have high value. And the shocking thing that's occurred recently is that in Zambia and Malawi, where Chinese entrepreneurs have moved into these very poor African countries, wages are much lower now then they are in most of China. But they've actually been importing Chinese workers in factories in sub-Saharan Africa.

ILJ: That's ironic.

Clark: And encountering a lot of local opposition. The puzzle then is it seems just very hard to get people to cooperate effectively in production in these societies. I think that says this is an area where we really must examine what is going on here. One interesting idea is that the nature of modern technology is very demanding in terms of how careful workers have to be, how exactly they have to follow rules. So one thing to think of is there any way to develop other technologies more forgiving of the cultural histories of these societies? Another thing to look at is if we expose workers more to the kind of Western high income economic life and send them back would that actually help in changing workers attitudes and changing the economic life of those societies? But I don't have any simple recipe for economic growth, and anyone who does is someone you should avoid.

ILJ: (Laughs)

Clark: I do think that we're looking in the wrong place, and have been systematically. And it's the ideology of economics that pushes us there but it's very clear that it is the wrong place. So it's at least worth considering, given the true constraints, what can we do? How can we operate? What are the processes we can set in place? And if we are going to solve the problem of poverty in sub-Saharan Africa, the solution is going to come in a very different form then the followers of Adam Smith are going to accept.

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Wow!  Great interview.

... if the rich are different from the poor, either culturally or genetically, then this process may be gradually transforming society because the rich and their descendants are taking over all the positions in society. So if it was a genetic advantage the rich had, there may actually be genetic changes in this long Malthusian interval between the arrival of settled agriculture and the Industrial Revolution.

Very intriguing notion, that I remember reading about in an earlier article about Clark, "Are the British genetically capitalist?".

Aside from the "just so" story of English rich people outpopulating the poorer classes and thus diffusing their more capitalist outlook and habits "downwards" throughout the society, is Clark's evidence for this only in the lengthening of interest rates over time as an indicator of growing "patience" in English culture?

If you go to medieval Europe their interest rates were ten to twelve percent for things like land. By the eve of the Industrial Revolution the return on land in England dropped to about four percent. So in the pre-industrial world interest rates seem to indicate the amount of patience people are exhibiting.

My understanding is that when microcredit institutions, including commercial banks, go into poor communities without developed financial infrastructure or even social traditions or educational background for borrowing and investment, they typically need to start charging high interest rates, even up to 50%.  But over time, these interest rates have come down to 30, even 20% or less.  But those rates have gone down well within a generation, in the course of a decade or so, and therefore cannot be explained through the genetic diffusion of "patience".

(By the way, 50, 30, 20% may seem usurious exploitation, as it did to me at first -- until I learned that microcredit clients otherwise had no choice but to borrow from loansharks charging well over 100% and even higher.)

In short, what other evidence does Clark cite in support of a genetic basis for the transference of capitalist traits in English society?

The key to culture is religion. Daniel Dennett @ TED (Feb 2006)

by marco (cowannar at gmail punkt com) on Sat Sep 29th, 2007 at 10:29:55 PM EST
Just occurred to me that Clark might respond by saying that those first-generation microentrepreneurs might be genetically pre-disposed to having a more "capitalist" personality, and with the presumed increased economic affluence that their microbusinesses will bring them, they will be more likely to raise children to maturity who will continue propagating these capitalist attitudes and behaviors.

I am not opposed a priori to the notion that "capitalism-friendly" personality traits could be genetically based.  However, I am not sure how Clark's theory rules out survival of the fittest "memes" rather than the fittest genes as an explanation of the propagation of capitalist attitudes and behavior through society.  After all, isn't it just as possible that children develop the same attitudes and habits of their parents through education and imitation as through genetic similarity?

The key to culture is religion. Daniel Dennett @ TED (Feb 2006)

by marco (cowannar at gmail punkt com) on Sat Sep 29th, 2007 at 10:46:12 PM EST
[ Parent ]
(Last comment on this diary, I promise, and then I'm off to Shanghai to watch Brazil and Germany in the Women's World Cup finals, and then to celebrate Chinese National Day.)

However, I am not sure how Clark's theory rules out survival of the fittest "memes" rather than the fittest genes as an explanation of the propagation of capitalist attitudes and behavior through society.

I see now that Clark lays most of the emphasis on cultural rather than genetic propagation of capitalist behavior and attitudes.  But he plays coy with the idea that genes may could be the basis for the English industrial capitalism as well.

The modern English are the descendants of the upper classes of the preindustrial world, those who prospered economically. The poor disappeared. This process was most likely cultural, but we cannot exclude the possibility that the English may even be genetically capitalist.

<...>

If the English in 1800 lived no better than in the Stone Age, why did they have economic growth unlike earlier societies? In any preindustrial society the average man only had two surviving children. But Englishmen who were economically successful, all the way from the Middle Ages to 1800, left four or five surviving children at their deaths. In contrast, landless labourers left fewer than two children. Economic success translated powerfully into reproductive success. The poorest individuals in preindustrial England had so few surviving children their families were dying out.

Preindustrial England was thus a world of constant downward mobility. Given the static nature of the preindustrial economy, the superabundant children of the rich had to, on average, move down the social hierarchy to find work. Craftsmen's sons became labourers, merchants' sons petty traders, large landowners' sons smallholders. Attributes that ensured later economic dynamism - the middle-class values of patience, hard work, ingenuity, innovativeness, education - were thus spread throughout the population for generations by biological means.

<...>

But why did this process advance faster in England than elsewhere? One advantage of England was how dull most English history is - there are plenty of villages where nothing of significance happened between 1200 and 1800. The reproductive success of the rich was not disrupted by invasions, social upheavals and catastrophes. The second advantage just seems to be an accident of English demographics. In both preindustrial Japan and China the rich had more children than the poor, but in a more modest way. Thus there was not the same cascade of children from the educated classes down the social scale.

England's success may be in our genes



The key to culture is religion. Daniel Dennett @ TED (Feb 2006)
by marco (cowannar at gmail punkt com) on Sun Sep 30th, 2007 at 02:36:43 AM EST
[ Parent ]
... that does not actually exist to be explained.

There is no reason to explain why the pace of invention, on a worldwide basis, was faster in the 1800's than the 1300's ... to the best of our ability to tell, it was faster in the 1300's than the 800's, faster in the 800's than in the 300's, faster in the 300's than in the (-200)'s, and etc. Exponential growth in invention at relativity steady rates results in increments that are constantly getting bigger and bigger.

And the explanation of why that growth is exponential in character is not especially difficult either ... invention is primarily novel recombinations of existing technology, often with new knowledge discovered in the process of recombination, and the greater the stock of working technology, the greater the potential for new recombinations.

And neither does the fact of the Industrial Revolution wave of innovations require any special explanation, since innovation typically comes in waves, with one wave of innovations being elaborated and to a certain extent playing out before a new wave of innovations along a different technological channel comes along. This has been an observation made by Schumpeter (Wikipedia) ... and I have also seen an alternate theory of the same abstract phenomenon grounded in American Institutionalism by an obscure American Institutionalist economist (pdf) ... what would require special explanation would be if the "Industrial Revolution" was not a wave of innovation of a particular family of inventions which was then elaborated and refined.

Circa 1500, India had a persistent trade deficit to the East, with China, and a persistent trade surplus to the West, with Arabia, and via Arabia with Africa and Europe. After the Spanish stumbled onto two mountains of silver in the New World, enterprising European nations that were able to sell goods to the Spanish could use the silver to buy their way into the Asian carrying trade ... part of that process was the establishment of a string of entrepots en-route to the China Seas and the Seven Seas.

As a consequence of the Industrial Revolution, India stopped exporting cotton cloth to the west, and started importing it. The result was prolonged financial constraint, and into the constraint the British were able to leverage their ability to better finance armies into the conquest of India. The fundamental conditions that allowed the British to conquer India with Indian soldiers fielded primarily with Indian-produced supplies did not, in fact, change when the conquest was solidified, and so anyone looking for the fruits of conquest and finding little benefit has got the issue turned around ... the fruits had already been gained, and I suspect that a main driving motivation of the incremental process of conquest was preventing other European powers from getting a piece of the action.

Of course when you have the benefits for Britain and the costs to India built into the benchmark that you are using for your basis of comparison, exerting military power and investing in infrastructure to exert that power makes it appear as if the net costs are to Britain and the net benefits to India.

Utsukushikereba sore de ii

by BruceMcF (agila61 at netscape dot net) on Sun Sep 30th, 2007 at 08:15:59 AM EST
[ Parent ]
Regarding exponentials, the requirement for escaping the Malthusian Trap isn't met until the doubling time for productivity is less than the (potential, but held in check) doubling time for population. Exponential improvement is not enough, unless the time constant is right.

Words and ideas I offer here may be used freely and without attribution.
by technopolitical on Sun Sep 30th, 2007 at 08:37:04 PM EST
[ Parent ]
Also, industrial productivity doesn't necessarily affect the production of food. Interestingly enough, our present industrial agricultural productivity per acre is less than "hand farmed" productivity per acre. Since the Malthusian thesis is the shortage of land, it's hard to see that any of this makes any sense.  
by bil on Tue Oct 2nd, 2007 at 01:26:00 PM EST
[ Parent ]
Interestingly enough, our present industrial agricultural productivity per acre is less than "hand farmed" productivity per acre.
DO you have sources for that? I'd be really interested in reading up on it.

We have met the enemy, and it is us — Pogo
by Migeru (migeru at eurotrib dot com) on Mon Oct 8th, 2007 at 04:44:27 PM EST
[ Parent ]
There's also the minor point that Medieval England had no culture of innovation.

There was no concept of entrepreneurship, universities were dedicated to theology and metaphysics, and people with original ideas tended to find themselves tied to the top of a big pile of wood and set on fire.

You could make a good living trucking stuff from one part of the world to a different part of the world. But being a merchant is hardly the same as being an innovator in the sense that we understand it today.

Growth tends not to happen without real innovation. Trucking stuff from one part of the world to the other isn't quite the same, not even when it's valuable and desirable stuff.

The whole premise is ridiculous. And flailing at people who dare to criticise the rather obvious holes isn't making it any more convincing.

There's certainly a need to explain the industrial revolution, but my suspicion is that if there was any intellectual trickle-down effect, it came from a combination of increased secularisation and a fad for the natural sciences among Europe's aristocrats.

Europe isn't distinctively capitalist - we certainly didn't invent capitalism, and we're not any more, or less, exploitative and thuggish about it than other civilisations have been.

But Europe is distinctively curious, and it's possibly the only culture in history where collaborative intellectual exploration tied to formal reality checks has become a core intellectual tradition.

Cultures which are more interested in quoting people who died hundreds or thousands of years ago are at a rather obvious disadvantage when it comes to competitive innovation.

by ThatBritGuy (thatbritguy (at) googlemail.com) on Mon Oct 1st, 2007 at 02:38:42 PM EST
[ Parent ]
Yes. It's striking that Clark nowhere mentions the scientific revolution, which culminated in England with Newton, predating the industrial revolution, and, I would argue, setting the stage for it.

I do not think it is a coincidence that Newton and Watt belonged to the same society.

A bomb, H bomb, Minuteman / The names get more attractive
The decisions are made by NATO / The press call it British opinion

-- The Three Johns

by Alexander on Tue Oct 2nd, 2007 at 02:59:08 PM EST
[ Parent ]
So they're living on piles of shit

Evidently nowadays it is possible to make a very good living today off of piles of the stuff.


Utsukushikereba sore de ii

by BruceMcF (agila61 at netscape dot net) on Sat Sep 29th, 2007 at 11:05:46 PM EST
In Japan, their demographic system only created a modest advantage for the Samurai class. Consequently, there wasn't the same kind of cascade downward into the merchants and mechanics ranks of the excess children of the upper classes that you get in someone like England.

I don't see how this is relevant.  My understanding is that the samurai despised commerce and business (for all their scorn of money, they of course understood its importance and systematically expropriated wealth from peasants and merchants, including moneylenders, through land rents, fees and taxes -- but not through business activities, as far as I know.)  And when the Meiji Restoration abolished the samurai class in the 1870s, many former samurai who tried to go into business to support themselves failed miserably.

Thus, if it is true that samurai were generally not good businesspeople -- or at least that their value system and activities did not put any importance on business -- even if the samurai had had a reproductive advantage over the lower classes, it does not follow that Japan would have developed a more capitalistic culture earlier.

It would be interesting to find out the demographics of the merchant classes that flourished in Japan in the Edo period (1600-1850).

The key to culture is religion. Daniel Dennett @ TED (Feb 2006)

by marco (cowannar at gmail punkt com) on Sat Sep 29th, 2007 at 11:08:19 PM EST
You raise an interesting question about the demographics of merchant classes in Japan between 1600-1850. I'd be curious to learn that myself.  

Intrepid Liberal Journal
by Intrepid Liberal Journal on Sun Sep 30th, 2007 at 02:21:05 AM EST
[ Parent ]
In one of the radio interviews I listened to with him, he actually admits that it wasn't the aristocracy who he was talking about in England either: he called them violent plunderers, or something like that.  Rather, he was referring to the increasingly wealthy commercial classes.

I wonder why he didn't simply apply the same principle to Japan.

The key to culture is religion. Daniel Dennett @ TED (Feb 2006)

by marco (cowannar at gmail punkt com) on Sun Sep 30th, 2007 at 02:24:51 AM EST
[ Parent ]
... explaining the lack of dynamic entrepreneurial development, when it is rather the existence of dynamic entrepreneurial development that requires explaining.

At the outset of the Tokugawa shogunate, substantial towns of more than 10,000 people were pretty much restricted to a ten or twenty mile radius of Kyoto.

At the time of the Meiji "restoration", there were substantial towns and cities over most of Japan.

A strange thing to "just happen" in a nation supposedly trapped in the past like a fly in amber.

And, of course, the Japanese Industrial Revolution was by no means imposed from without ... it was every bit as domestically driven by active "catch up" policies as the Industrial Revolutions of Germany or the US.

Indeed, if it were not for the fact that the economic facts on the ground were straining against the strictures of Shogunate society, how could the Meiji Restoration ever have occurred? ... which implies that it was the dynamism of the agricultural and commercial revolutions the unfolded during the Tokugawa Shogunates that laid the foundation for the Japanese Industrial Revolution.


Utsukushikereba sore de ii

by BruceMcF (agila61 at netscape dot net) on Sun Sep 30th, 2007 at 01:09:37 PM EST
[ Parent ]
My understanding is that the samurai despised commerce and business (for all their scorn of money, they of course understood its importance and systematically expropriated wealth from peasants and merchants, including moneylenders, through land rents, fees and taxes -- but not through business activities, as far as I know.)  And when the Meiji Restoration abolished the samurai class in the 1870s, many former samurai who tried to go into business to support themselves failed miserably.
Just like the Castillian Hidalgos. Is there a Japanese analogue of Don Quixote?

We have met the enemy, and it is us — Pogo
by Migeru (migeru at eurotrib dot com) on Mon Oct 8th, 2007 at 04:45:42 PM EST
[ Parent ]
On India:

Everything the English did, they didn't mean it this way, but everything they did should have led to the industrialization of India. They were not systematically exploiting India. They were in fact offering India the enormous possibility of becoming the second great industrial power in the world. That didn't happen, but it wasn't because of anything the British did. It was because of what happened internally in India. Because of India's weak responses to the new incentives the British Empire offered.

On "African societies":

What the very clear problem, say, within these African societies, is that even inside production enterprises it's very hard to get people to cooperate in production in a way that makes workers have high value.

<...>

The puzzle then is it seems just very hard to get people to cooperate effectively in production in these societies. I think that says this is an area where we really must examine what is going on here. One interesting idea is that the nature of modern technology is very demanding in terms of how careful workers have to be, how exactly they have to follow rules. So one thing to think of is there any way to develop other technologies more forgiving of the cultural histories of these societies?



The key to culture is religion. Daniel Dennett @ TED (Feb 2006)
by marco (cowannar at gmail punkt com) on Sat Sep 29th, 2007 at 11:17:09 PM EST
... when Africa was first a source of slave labor, and then a source of tropical commodities.

And the slave labor export regime was fueled by trading guns for slaves, generating war and more slaves and more demand for guns. Rather than being a "state of nature", during the period when Europe was a region of middle income states catching up with the wealthier East Asians, the Hobbesian state would seem to be a "state of European contact" when a region with a technological inferiority in armaments was either a potential source for material that could either be sold to obtain silver to use in East Asian commerce (the Ohio/Mississippi river valleys), or for labor to be used to produce that kind of material.

Fuel a centuries long arms race, burning like a slow fire from north to south along the Atlantic coast, draw random boundaries randomly including and subdividing previously fighting nations, and stand back in surprise that the result involves a lot of social conflict.


Utsukushikereba sore de ii

by BruceMcF (agila61 at netscape dot net) on Sun Sep 30th, 2007 at 01:18:21 PM EST
[ Parent ]
As Bruce McF notes in another comment, the statement about India is largely just not true. The de-industrialisation of India was built into the colonial power structure of conquest. As other historians have documented, "Indian entrepreneurs" existed, but only in industries that colonial authorities thought were appropriate and attempts to move into other areas of business were usually ruthlessly suppressed.
by Metatone (metatone [a|t] gmail (dot) com) on Sun Sep 30th, 2007 at 04:49:36 PM EST
[ Parent ]
I just recently read a book called "Black Rice," can't remember the author. It was about the indigenous and independent development of irrigated rice farming in medieval Africa. A highly complex system was developed and it was organized on a cooperative basis. This was one of the reasons the slave trading exploded into West Africa (Mali). The population was large.
In South Carolina these rice farmers were much sought after as slaves useful in developing the rice farming there. Of course the English slave-owners took the credit for developing a rice-growing system developed and built by their African slaves.
by bil on Tue Oct 2nd, 2007 at 01:44:18 PM EST
[ Parent ]
Personally, I believe factors beyond culture such as natural resources, geography and hostile neighbors are largely responsible for defining cultures. Hence, I further believe that activism is required to help influence those factors that shape cultures and hopefully facilitate worldwide prosperity and social justice.

But in the end, you agree that "shaping cultures" -- however it is done -- is necessary, or at least very helpful, to facilitating worldwide prosperity and social justice?

For example, the African societies that Gregory Clark mentions, and the Australian aborigine communities that he mentions in another radio interview (KXJZ's Insight), must alter their cultures in order to proser and enjoy social justice?

I agree with Clark that different societies may have different work habits and value systems with respect to business, wealth, economic security, etc.  However, where I am less comfortable is his positioning of modern industrial (and presumably post-industrial) capitalism, not only as a worldwide fait accompli with no way to opt out, but as something that is better than everything that came before it, economically speaking.  Aside from whether or not he is right about that, its implied message to all people in all societies around the world is:  "If you want to enjoy a nice life, you have to make sure your culture abides by the values and habits that are necessary for succeeding in a capitalist world."

Is that a fair inference from his book?

From that KXJZ Insight interview:

Insight interviewer Jeffrey Callison:  You said earlier that you're from Glasgow, and I'd like to tie that to something you wrote in your bio on your UC Davis website, that your grandparents actually came from Ireland to Scotland to work in the coal mines and steel mills of the Clyde Valley, and you wrote, "as part of the great diaspora of the Irish triggered by Ireland's failure to industrialize in the nineteenth century."

Ireland is right next door to England and Scotland that were both rapidly industrializing.  Why didn't Ireland industrialize?

Gregory Clark: Well, one of the problems that Ireland has was [sic] that it was in a free-trade agreement with England, and it turns out it was very greatly in Ireland's advantage to  specialize in agriculture in that period.  But there really also was this cultural difference, between the Irish and the English, that the cost of labor in Ireland should have been half that in England, if you just looked at day wages.  It was actually the case that labor costs were as high in Ireland as they were in England because Irish workers in the nineteenth century just didn't do a lot of work in a given time.  And that's what the book emphasizes, in the modern world, is that the amount of work effort you can get out of people in different societies actually varies greatly.  It's not only as a result of the history of these societies; there are other, kind of, cultural influences.  But the book is saying, that's where you've got to look if you want to explain wealth and poverty in the modern world.  The thing that economists are fascinated by is incentives, and they're fascinated by the idea that everyone everywhere is the same.  The book is really saying, No, we're different, that's why we get different results, and that's why people respond differently to incentives.  And if you want to change the fortunes of some of these societies, getting the incentives right may not do anything until you change the underlying culture.



The key to culture is religion. Daniel Dennett @ TED (Feb 2006)
by marco (cowannar at gmail punkt com) on Sun Sep 30th, 2007 at 12:16:40 AM EST
with "shaping cultures." But I do believe famine for example can shape a culture in horribly negative ways. So if we can mitigate famine than we should do it. Massive human rights abuses can shape a culture and if activism can promote awareness and help stop it then I believe we should do that. But I don't believe in my country's neocon nonsense of imposing a world view on a society at the point of a gun.

Intrepid Liberal Journal
by Intrepid Liberal Journal on Sun Sep 30th, 2007 at 02:18:39 AM EST
[ Parent ]
But I don't believe in my country's neocon nonsense of imposing a world view on a society at the point of a gun.

Certainly not.  We should be sending in our corporations to go into these countries to teach them by example.

But seriously, I think Clark is in fact in favor of "cultural shaping", through modern industrialization, no less, as comments in his article How To Save Africa suggest.

Japan did have to adapt its society and culture in order to embrace industrial capitalism in the 19th century, as a matter of survival to ward off impending Western colonization.  For example, they had to drastically equalize society by getting rid of the feudal caste system that had strictly ordered society for hundreds of years.  But in other ways, Japanese culture happened to be already quite a good match for capitalism: strong work ethic, future preference, high demand for quality, high literacy, etc.

Unless there is a way for poor societies to improve their standards of living without embracing modern capitalism, those societies may also have to find synergies between their own cultures and capitalism, and perhaps change their own societies and cultures to a certain extent to embrace capitalism, in order to improve the quality of life for their people.

Otherwise, they may face an even more dire consequence than further impoverishment.

The key to culture is religion. Daniel Dennett @ TED (Feb 2006)

by marco (cowannar at gmail punkt com) on Sun Sep 30th, 2007 at 03:06:40 AM EST
[ Parent ]
... through actions with positive public impacts is a far surer way to shape a culture that is compatible with community interdependence than the converse. We might know which culture has which system-wide impact we want, but it is absurd to suggest that we know which aspects of that culture can be effectively introduced into another to "push" it in that direction.

Far better to give that people in that culture the means to travel in that direction and allow them to make the cultural adaptations, including what borrowings they find to work.

I mean, I have a hard time imagining a baseball game ending in a draw at the end of the ninth inning, but it seems to work for the Japanese.


Utsukushikereba sore de ii

by BruceMcF (agila61 at netscape dot net) on Sun Sep 30th, 2007 at 01:22:36 PM EST
[ Parent ]
Fourteen percent of children born in Uganda die before the age of five. If the Millennium Project reduces such deaths to American levels, that alone will increase the population growth to 4.2% a year. Without sustained economic growth, this is just a recipe for more miserable living conditions.

To achieve sustained growth economies, Uganda would have to switch employment to manufactures and services. Despite the astonishing low wage of these economies -- apparel workers in East Africa still cost about $0.40 an hour compared to $10-$20 in America and Europe -- industrialization has escaped Africa.

Fostering industrialization is not easy. British Colonial administrators in India between 1857 and 1947 engaged in many of the cheap but effective health and agricultural improvement and infrastructure measures that Mr. Sachs advocates. India remained impoverished, however, because no enlightened government edict could make Indian textile mills profitable. Indeed India deindustrialized in that era.

There is no simple formula for industrialization that is appealing to many. But that is where the focus must be of the attempts to help Africa. The Sachs plan is a proposal to ameliorate the symptoms of poverty, not treat its cause.

How To Save Africa



The key to culture is religion. Daniel Dennett @ TED (Feb 2006)
by marco (cowannar at gmail punkt com) on Sun Sep 30th, 2007 at 12:26:27 AM EST
Indian de-industrialisation can be traced to enforced economic policies, including, but not limited to exchange rates and market sales restrictions.
by Metatone (metatone [a|t] gmail (dot) com) on Sun Sep 30th, 2007 at 04:51:40 PM EST
[ Parent ]
There is no simple formula for industrialization that is appealing to many.

If you're a planet on the verge of a massive climate shift, there's no simple formula for industrialisation that's appealing - period.

by ThatBritGuy (thatbritguy (at) googlemail.com) on Mon Oct 1st, 2007 at 02:42:17 PM EST
[ Parent ]
More food for thought:

Maybe the Malthusian model doesn't fit modern poor countries (or maybe even older poor countries)?

Charles Kenny: Is Anywhere Stuck in a Malthusian Trap?

The key features of the Malthusian model are that (i) income determines population growth, with rising wages increasing survival rates and (ii) there is a vital factor of production (land) which is fixed, implying decreased returns to scale for all other factors. The equilibrium state in such a model is a population living on subsistence incomes. The analysis in this paper suggests that (i) the link between income and population growth is (almost) everywhere broken and (ii) there is little evidence of declining returns to scale because of constraints imposed by land carrying capacity at the macro level anywhere. Population dynamics are being driven by non-income factors in a manner that is reducing population growth rates everywhere. At the same time, output is increasing everywhere, in a manner inconsistent with significantly declining returns to scale based on land being a vital factor of production.

h/t to David Warsh's (pretty harsh) review of Clark. Brian Caplan at the libertarian EconLog also links to a paper outlining an alternative story where rates of technological progress and income actually increase with population.

Caplan also thinks that institutions are much more important than Clark gives them credit for. Being a good libertarian he emphasizes free trade and property rights.

I would add that there is more than one way to organize a market economy and openness to trade (e.g. the Nordic countries), and that notions of efficient institutions also should include a public sector strong enough to provide or subsidize basic public goods provision like transport and communication infrastructure, education, basic research, public health, and so forth.

Eric Jones argues that in addition to market economies, public goods provision was very important for societies that managed to break out of Malthusian traps (if only temporarily), not just modern Europe but also, for example, Sung China from the 10th to the 12th century:

Between the 10th and 11th centuries, the population of China doubled in size. Within its borders, the Northern Song Dynasty had a population of some 100 million people. This came about through expanded rice cultivation in central and southern China, along with the production of abundant food surpluses.

Eric Jones: Growth Recurring

Perhaps the chief novelty was the extent to which the land market had been opened up in the Tang period, by the ninth century. . . . Government relinquished its function of allocating and re-allocating land in return for labor services and taxes in kind and instead took its taxes in cash. The hands-off policy facilitated the growth of the private land market . . . land increasingly fell into the hands of the most energetic producers . . . to put it to . . . uses the price system indicated. A freeing . . . of markets in factors of production - land, labor, and capital - is a significant sign of greater allocative efficiency.

 . . . a vital upturn in Europe's growth came when the private market in production was supplemented by the governmental provision of public goods. . . . There is evidence of vigorous public goods creation by the Sung, particularly in the communications sector. . . . the Sung combination of state investment and greater market freedom may account for the release of productive energies. . . . State action . . . built canals . . . rivers were also canalized to make them navigable . . . Transport costs fell substantially. . . . sufficient to generate regional specialization along lines of comparative advantage. . . . Growth in farm output within a market now better connected by fresh roads, canals, and canalized rivers . . . was very close to the heart of the Sung `economic revolution.

Finally, Caplan also criticizes Clark's "labor quality" argument. Basically in a series of papers Clark has looked at India and concluded that we can't explain its failure to industrialize by any of the usual suspects: differences in access to technology, capital investment, management quality, or whatever. So once everything else is off the table "culture" is the only explanation left: Indian textile workers simply refused to work as hard as British or Japanese textile workers.

Well, maybe, or maybe not:

Bishnupriya Gupta: Work and Efficiency in Cotton Mills: Did the Indian Entrepreneur Fail?

. . . wages and effort in cotton mills were products of the state of development of the wider economy. Wages in cotton mills were not determined by labour productivity in that sector, but reflected the national wage and the level of economic development.

To compare differences in labour productivity, it is important to consider the differences between the British industrial worker and the Indian cotton mill worker.

The former was a product of a hundred years of industrial development and high economic growth. The latter belonged to an underdeveloped agricultural economy. The Indian cotton mill worker had moved to the city of Bombay from the rural hinterland in search of better living conditions. The quality of work depended on the worker's nutritional level, level of education and familiarity with a factory discipline.

The differences in economic growth in India and Japan may also explain the early implementation of organizational change in Japan. With economic growth, wages in Japan increased rapidly. Faced with high wages, cotton mill industry introduced changes in work practice. In a sluggish economy, such as India, wages did not rise much until the First World War. The cotton mill entrepreneur faced little pressure for change.

. . . Over manning in the [Indian] cotton textile industry was an organizational choice given the low wages in the economy and does not necessarily reflect workers resistance to an increase in effort.

In other words, India was caught in a low-income, high poverty development trap, much as was the US South from the end of the Civil War to the 1930s. US southerners also long had (and still do, to an extent) a reputation for, umm, enjoying their leisure somewhat more than the rest of us.

At any rate, I think Clark's "labor quality" explanation is more an evasion of the issue than anything else. Labor is more productive in rich countries. Duh. Why? We don't really know, and chalking it all up to differences in "culture" really doesn't help us explain anything.

by TGeraghty on Sun Sep 30th, 2007 at 03:17:03 AM EST
Here's a game theory model that could be applied to the problem of how an economy gets stuck in a poverty trap:

Slate: The Stag Hunt

In the stag hunt, two hunters must each decide whether to hunt the stag together or hunt rabbits alone. Half a stag is better than a brace of rabbits, but the stag will only be brought down with a combined effort. Rabbits, on the other hand, can be hunted by an individual without any trouble.

There are two rational outcomes to the stag hunt: Either both hunters hunt the stag as a team, or each hunts rabbits by himself. Each would prefer to cooperate in hunting the stag, but if the other player's motives or actions are uncertain, the rabbit hunt is a risk-free alternative.

Human society is full of stag hunts, but richer societies have become very good at formalizing the cooperative outcome. . . . a formalized form of trust, based on institutions that dramatically expand our ability to interact with those beyond our immediate neighbors.

So imagine that firms have the choice to offer wither high wages or low wages, while workers decide whether to provide high or low levels of work effort.

If firms offer high wages, but workers choose low effort, then firms lose a lot of money. If workers provide high effort but firms offer low wages, then workers will obviously not be happy.

So the outcomes will tend to be either a high-wage economy where workers provide high effort (e.g. Britain or Japan), or a low-wage economy where workers provide low effort (India).

The problem is not necessarily simply a problem of lazy workers or poor management, but a problem of coordinating on the high-wage, high-effort outcome. Lack of trust and mutual uncertainty about others' motives between workers and firm owners can be barriers to accomplishing such coordination.

by TGeraghty on Sun Sep 30th, 2007 at 03:53:49 AM EST
[ Parent ]
I'd add that Clark conveniently write out the instability of ownership at this historical period in India. "Indian entrepreneurs" were always vulnerable to "police action" from British forces, whenever their actions didn't fit with colonial policy. To pretend otherwise is just to fall into the "Niall Ferguson" school of "benevolent empire that never did no-one no wrong, no sir."
by Metatone (metatone [a|t] gmail (dot) com) on Sun Sep 30th, 2007 at 04:38:17 PM EST
[ Parent ]
I know next to nothing about the historical details of this stuff ... in fact, the only factoid I do retain comes from (I think) Chomsky's 'Year 501', where it is stated that England only achieved superiority over Indian cotton manufacturers by cutting off the hands of all the weavers in Bengal, at that time the wealthiest society the Europeans had ever seen, and shortly after of course the most destitute.

Another good thing to check out can be found on the archives of the Monthly Review site ... Helen something-or-other-Wood and an article on why England rather than anyone else was first in line for modern capitalism.

Slightly OT, but let us bear in mind that any European who chanced to settle upon Japan stayed there in preference to the smelly, dirty, sexually repressed Europe of the times. 'Oh darling, these filthy yellow heathens are keeping me prisoner against my will! ...' That, of course, being a standard excuse to the long-abandoned European wife.

It's all just a (non-existent) God's idea of a joke. It was England because it was England. It should have been Japan or China, but it wasn't, because it wasn't.

And we will all end up dead much before the race's appointed time, because the 20th century was 'the American century', even though they couldn't fight and couldn't even maintain relative prosperity compared to a bunch of defeated (even nuked) peoples.

It's all just a joke. 42.

It's a joke. Get it?

by wing26 on Tue Oct 2nd, 2007 at 12:12:32 PM EST
[ Parent ]
England only achieved superiority over Indian cotton manufacturers by cutting off the hands of all the weavers in Bengal

Do you have a source for that?

And could you give us more information about the article by Helen Whatshername in the Monthly Review?

"Ne te courbe que pour aimer..." René Char

by Melanchthon on Tue Oct 2nd, 2007 at 05:41:10 PM EST
[ Parent ]
Wing wrote Chomsky's 'Year 501' which is fortunately online so (a bit of evil googling later):

The wealth of the colonies returned to Britain, creating huge fortunes. By 1700, the East India Company accounted for "above half the trade of the nation," one contemporary critic commented. Through the following half-century, Keay writes, its shares became the "equivalent of a gilt-edged security, much sought after by trustees, charities and foreign investors." The rapid growth of wealth and power set the stage for outright conquest and imperial rule. British officials, merchants, and investors "amassed vast fortunes," gaining "wealth beyond the dreams of avarice" (Parker). That was particularly true in Bengal, which, Keay continues, "was destabilized and impoverished by a disastrous experiment in sponsored government" -- one of the many "experiments" in the Third World that have not exactly redounded to the benefit of the experimental subjects. Two English historians of India, Edward Thompson and G.T. Garrett, described the early history of British India as "perhaps the world's high-water mark of graft": "a gold-lust unequalled since the hysteria that took hold of the Spaniards of Cortes' and Pizzaro's age filled the English mind. Bengal in particular was not to know peace again until she has been bled white." It is significant, they remark, that one of the Hindustani words that has become part of the English language is "loot."12

The fate of Bengal brings out essential elements of the global conquest. Calcutta and Bangladesh are now the very symbols of misery and despair. In contrast, European warrior-merchants saw Bengal as one of the richest prizes in the world. An early English visitor described it as "a wonderful land, whose richness and abundance neither war, pestilence, nor oppression could destroy." Well before, the Moroccan traveller Ibn Battuta had described Bengal as "a country of great extent, and one in which rice is extremely abundant. Indeed, I have seen no region of the earth in which provisions are so plentiful." In 1757, the same year as Plassey, Clive described the textile center of Dacca as "extensive, populous, and rich as the city of London"; by 1840 its population had fallen from 150,000 to 30,000, Sir Charles Trevelyan testified before the Select Committee of the House of Lords, "and the jungle and malaria are fast encroaching... Dacca, the Manchester of India, has fallen from a very flourishing town to a very poor and small town." It is now the capital of Bangladesh.

Bengal was known for its fine cotton, now extinct, and for the excellence of its textiles, now imported. After the British takeover, British traders, using "every conceivable form of roguery," "acquired the weavers' cloth for a fraction of its value," English merchant William Bolts wrote in 1772: "Various and innumerable are the methods of oppressing the poor weavers...such as by fines, imprisonments, floggings, forcing bonds from them, etc." "The oppression and monopolies" imposed by the English "have been the causes of the decline of trade, the decrease of the revenues, and the present ruinous condition of affairs in Bengal."

While Bengal was despoiled, Britain's textile industry was protected from Indian competition; a matter of importance, because Indian producers enjoyed a comparative advantage in printed cotton textile fabrics for the expanding market in England. A British Royal Industrial Commission of 1916-1918 recalled that Indian industrial development was "not inferior to that of the more advanced European nations" when "merchant adventurers from the West" arrived; it may even be "that the industries of India were far more advanced than those of the West up to the advent of the industrial revolution," Frederick Clairmonte observes," citing British studies. Parliamentary Acts of 1700 and 1720 forbade the import of printed fabrics from India, Persia, and China; all goods seized in contravention of this edict were to be confiscated, sold by auction, and re-exported. Indian calicoes were barred, including "any garment or apparel whatsoever...in or about any bed, chair cushion, window curtain, or any other sort of household stuff or furniture." Later, British taxes also discriminated against local cloth within India, which was forced to take inferior British textiles.

Here be more paragraphs

In my view the deindustrialisation of India is crucial in understanding the Industrial revolution in England. To get permanent control over the high-value added parts of the production chain they needed to be moved to England. But the labor requirements for taking over the indian cloth production must have been huge. Enter Watts and his steamengines.

Btw, Marx considered the introduction of railroads in India to be a herold of imminent industrialisation. From the intervue I get the impression that Marx and Clark shares a commonplace idea of industrialisation as a step in an evolution to a richer society.

I see the whole concept of industrialism as primarily a way to increase resource extraction, not to make more efficient use of resources. This is not an unique view and I should admit, that Hornborg's  The Power of the Machine has greatly influenced it. From this perspective the industrial revolution and the colonial empire goes hand in hand. Bleeding Bengal dry, stripmining and chopping down the rainforest are just different ways of extracting resources and bringing them home to the imperial core. The fossile energy bonanza has let this process continue as long as it has, and even yielding some tokens for the colonial peoples whos labor started it.

Nowadays when our resource extraction is higher then the planet yields, more industrialism might not be what is needed.

by A swedish kind of death on Tue Oct 2nd, 2007 at 07:01:57 PM EST
[ Parent ]
Hi

The author, as I remember, was Ellen Meiksins Wood. It was a memorable article, because the usual Marxist thing is (I think) that all this was more or less inevitable, whereas EMS said 'hey, it was just a few peculiarities of England (centralized state power, markets for wool and so on)...' .... I may be misconstruing what she said, but I don't think so. At that time, I had just discovered Socialism and Marxism, so a really interesting and apparently non-conformist approach to these matters really stuck out for me. But at the moment I am unable to find the article on MR's website. This is unsurprising, as I read it at least seven years ago.

I thank A Swedish Kind of Death for his efforts in defending my thesis, even if they do not bear out literally what I said. But I did say 'from memory', and I did give the text, which does show a level of violence and destruction more or less commensurate with what I stated.

One other thing to bear in mind: I do not dare mix it up with the heavyweights on eurotrib unless I am drunk first. After my own near-worthless comments, I normally stay away from the site for several days, ashamed that I even bothered to open my mouth amongst such company. So please understand the reasons for the delay. I am not an academic or a PhD candidate, and most of the things I have learnt from the Internet are retained in my head, not in a bookmark list. I do give a rough indication of the source, if I can remember it.

On this site (but not on many others) I am certainly willing to be corrected and to reconsider my opinions.

Thanks to all

by wing26 on Sat Oct 6th, 2007 at 06:43:16 AM EST
[ Parent ]
Thank you for pointing us to these interesting sources and for making me discover an author I didn't know of: Ellen Meiksins Wood. In fact, I think we agree: in my first comment, I said that Gregory Clark's claim that the British did not exploit India was highly questionable, but I didn't have enough knowledge of the issue to make a longer comment.

My answer to your comment was motivated by two things, first to have more information about the sources you mentioned (which you and ASKOD did above, thanks!) and, second, because the high quality of European Tribune is insured by the high intellectual standards we try to keep in our debates, mainly by linking to our sources.

I am no academic nor PhD candidate either. That doesn't prevent me to participate in debates and you are more than welcome to do the same! Indeed, as I said earlier, your contribution was a very valuable one.

I am looking forward to reading you here soon.

M.

"Ne te courbe que pour aimer..." René Char

by Melanchthon on Sat Oct 6th, 2007 at 10:34:25 AM EST
[ Parent ]
Interesting perspective. I agree with much of it, but not this.

The measure of patience in these pre-industrial societies is the interest rates? Because the interest rate tells you much you have to reward people to own land or own houses.How much do you have to pay them not to consume immediately, but instead own that asset and wait for future consumption? If you go back to ancient Babylon they had mortgage markets but the interest rates were typically twenty to twenty-five percent.

I think the fundamental point here is that the earlier you go, the less Capital there is knocking around a Society, and the more expensive it was. So it declined from Babylonian rates

If you go to medieval Europe their interest rates were ten to twelve percent for things like land.

through medieval rates

By the eve of the Industrial Revolution the return on land in England dropped to about four percent.

to the rates that existed before modern turbocharged Capitalism kicked in with the wonderful phenomena of Equity and Debt, and inflation, which is a conesuence of "gearing" and money based upon deficit.


So in the pre-industrial world interest rates seem to indicate the amount of patience people are exhibiting.
 

I think Clark's assumption here is totally upside-down - because it is the conventional Alice in Wonderland assumption.

It is not the case that people have become more patient: rather the reverse.

People had to be patient to accumulate Capital, and that was why it was so valuable. It was the good old market forces of  "supply and demand" - due to Capital scarcity - that set the price.

Because our deficit-based money supply actually consists credit (ie not Value in "moneyæ's worth", but its antithesis - an IOU, or claim over Value), we confuse the cost of credit with the cost of capital.

Interest rates now relate to the cost of credit - and that in turn to the probability of defaults: then they related to the returns from Capital, because there simply wasn't anything more than bilateral seller to buyer "trade" credit around.

It was, I believe, the Italian bankers, such as the Medici, who were among the first "credit intermediaries", and who brought in more sophisticated merchant banking use of credit, but theirs was "asset-backed" credit (backed by gold etc).

It was I think John Law's Banque Royale which in its brief but spectacular life (1718/1720) fuelled the Mississippi Bubble (and indirectly led the way to the Louisiana Purchase and the modern US?) by creating the model for the deficit-basis of money which is now the bedrock of our system.

Now the world is awash in both "Capital" and "Credit", but access to both is distributed unfairly - a situation that is both inequitable and unsustainable.

People have become ever more greedy - ie MORE impatient, not less - and "real" (before inflation kicked in all returns were "real") returns on Capital should in fact now be 2% or less.

Interest rates on credit - now that's another issue, and should be based upon the likelihood of default as opposed to arbitrary decisions of Central Banks, who are now entirely unnecessary intermediaries.

by ChrisCook (cojockathotmaildotcom) on Sun Sep 30th, 2007 at 07:12:15 AM EST
 If the English in 1800 lived no better than in the Stone Age, why did they have economic growth unlike earlier societies?

Simple. Because we were the among the first, and were certainly the most innovative, exponents of deficit-based capitalism. ie credit creation.

Prior to this, there simply wasn't the credit for development. Why have we leapt ahead of the Islamic world since about 300 years ago? It's the same reason: we created and mastered finance Capitalism and they would have none of it.

Come to that, the City still is ahead of the world in financial innovation, as witness the wave of credit derivatives and all the other complex financial toxic waste now breaking over our heads...

by ChrisCook (cojockathotmaildotcom) on Sun Sep 30th, 2007 at 07:53:33 AM EST
[ Parent ]
... itself emerged in the process of learning how to operate as a financial intermediary between supplying Spanish demands (directly or indirectly) to obtain silver, and using that silver in East Asia in the carrying trade to generate commercial profits.

That period of mercantile finance was a critical stepping stone to the development of industrial finance.

So we can take it back to the Spanish stumbling on their mountains of Silver, in Mexico and Peru.

And even further back, since before the Mongol conquest, hard currency in China was primarily minted in copper ... it was the Mongols that relied primarily on previous metal coinage. It seems reasonable that one reason that the Chinese copper cash had those holes in the middle was so you could tie a substantial number together with a cord, in the same way that the largest units of the Zairian Franc used to be bundled into bricks in order to arrive at useful units of currency for transaction

Utsukushikereba sore de ii

by BruceMcF (agila61 at netscape dot net) on Sun Sep 30th, 2007 at 01:32:14 PM EST
[ Parent ]
It is easy to confuse the development of money - which you are describing - with the development of credit intermediation (which I was referring to).

The two eventually converged in our current opaque, confusing and unsustainable "Money as Debt" aka "deficit-based" money.

Prof Clark - like most people (ie 99.999% of the population) is mistaken as to the nature of money and credit and their parallel development over time, and has confused accumulations of wealth aka "money's worth" (which I regard as "non financial" Capital) with the accumulations of IOU's we are used to, and which we mistakenly regard as "wealth" as opposed to claims over it.

by ChrisCook (cojockathotmaildotcom) on Sun Sep 30th, 2007 at 03:19:45 PM EST
[ Parent ]
There is no untangling the evolution of flows of funds and exchanges between different types of money from the evolution of finance in the three hundred years leading up to the "Industrial Revolution".

And it was certainly not the European moneys that were brought to East Asia to finance the access of the Europeans into the East Asian carrying trade ... it was the silver bullion, where the demand for bullion was guaranteed by the reliance of China on a silver based monetary system, from the time of the Mongol conquest until well after the time, sometime in the 1800's, when Europe passed China as the economic center of gravity in the world trading system.

Indeed, in North America in the 1700's, there were colonies where bankers acceptances drawn on merchant houses in London not only circulated as money, but traded above par with colonial issued money.


Utsukushikereba sore de ii

by BruceMcF (agila61 at netscape dot net) on Sun Sep 30th, 2007 at 03:32:09 PM EST
[ Parent ]
Let's also not forget coal, which England had plenty of, and is the actual basis for the industrial "revolution."
by bil on Tue Oct 2nd, 2007 at 01:31:32 PM EST
[ Parent ]
That's an interesting point. I'll have to make sure to follow up and encourage him to read the comments likes yours on Euro Trib. I think he would be very interested.

Intrepid Liberal Journal
by Intrepid Liberal Journal on Sun Sep 30th, 2007 at 12:02:02 PM EST
[ Parent ]

So, I think what I should be careful to identify it's the modern image we have of what Smith was about, rather than Smith himself. I'm not a historian of economic thought, so what I mainly want to emphasize is the message we've taken from Smith, the Smith we've constructed.

Smith is regarded as arguing that growth results from getting the correct economic incentives, which results from getting the right set of economic institutions. That's really an incredibly strong founding principal of modern economics, the idea that people really are at base the same everywhere. If you can only get the incentives correct, then economic growth will result. So, the book strongly takes issue with that.

I'm saying that economists have had to construct a false history of the world. They've had to imagine a pre-industrial past that is, you know, a cross of Brave Heart and Monty Python's Holy Grail and all the bad movies about medieval England.

This is very basic stuff for us, but no wonder the book is seen as controversial...


In the long run, we're all dead. John Maynard Keynes

by Jerome a Paris (jeromeguillet@yahoo.fr) on Sun Sep 30th, 2007 at 08:17:03 AM EST
Thanks for this stimulating diary, ILJ!

I agree with his anthropological approach of economics and I share his criticism of the incentives theory. I also think that culture is a major factor to explain economic development patterns. In fact, my own experience (I've been working with people from many cultures in many countries) leads me to acknowledge there are big differences between cultures in terms of attitude towards organisation, cooperation, innovation, trust, conflict resolution and all the elements that underpin productivity growth.

However, that doesn't means cultures should be ranked by their ability to produce the highest growth rates. As it has been amply discussed here, GDP growth and accumulation of wealth are not the ultimate indicators of a civilisation success. Furthermore, the fact that the countries which created a model and imposed it to the rest of the world (with the help of many others) are the most successful within this model is somewhat tautological...

However, I find some of his claims oversimplifying and questionable. For example, when he claims:

the average government tax rate for medieval England? It's one percent.

we must remember that, in the Middle Ages "government" and "taxes" had a very different meaning than today. And he seems not to take into account the fact that people had to contribute in cash or in kind to their overlords and to the clergy which, in turn provided (or were supposed to provide) "public services" like protection, public order, healthcare and salvation of the souls.

Ditto when he says the British did not exploit India...

And, apart from his confessed fondness for sociobiology which is, to say the least, a