(Redirected from Industrialization)
'Industrialisation' (also spelled 'Industrialization') or an 'Industrial Revolution' is a process of
social and
economic change whereby a human group is transformed from a
pre-industrial society (an economy where the amount of capital accumulated per capita is low) to an
industrial one (a fully developed
capitalist economy). It is a part of wider
modernisation process, where this social and economic change is closely related with
technological innovation, particularly the
development of large-scale
energy and
metallurgy production. Industrialisation also introduces some form of
philosophical change, or to a different attitude in the perception of nature.
The lack of a large industry sector is wildly seen as a major handicap in a country's economy, pushing many
governments to encourage or enforce industrialisation throught artificial means.
The world's industrialization started with the
Industrial Revolution in the
18th century in northwest
England.
Consequences
Most pre-industrial economies had standards of living not much above
subsistence, meaning that the majority of the population were focused on producing their means of survival. For example, in medieval Europe, 80% of the labor force was employed in subsistence agriculture.
Some pre-industrial economies, such as
Ancient Athens, have had trade and commerce as significant factors, enjoying wealth far beyond a sustenance standard of living.
Famines were frequent in most pre-industrial societies, although some, such as the
Netherlands and
England of the 17th and 18th centuries, the
Italian city states of the 15th century and the ancient
Greek and
Roman civilisations were able to escape the famine cycle through increasing trade and
commercialisation of the
agricultural sector. It is estimated that during the 17th century Netherlands
imported nearly 70% of its grain supply and in the 5th century BC Athens imported 75% of its total food supply.
Industrialisation has spawned its own health problems. Modern
stressors include noise, air, water
pollution,
poor nutrition,
dangerous machinery,
impersonal work,
isolation,
poverty,
homelessness, and
substance abuse.
Health problems in
industrial nations are as much caused by economic, social,
political, and
cultural factors as by
pathogens. Industrialisation has become a major medical issue world wide.
History
Industrial Revolution in Western Europe

Industrial output in 2005
In the
16th and
17th century Great Britain experienced a massive increase in agricultural productivity known as
Agricultural Revolution, who enable an unprecedented
population growth, freeing up a significant percentage of the workforce, and thereby helped drive the
Industrial Revolution.
When
capitalised, Industrial Revolution refers to the first industrial revolution, which took place in
Britain during the
18th and
19th centuries. The
Second Industrial Revolution describes later, somewhat less dramatic changes which came about with the widespread availability of
electric power, the
internal-combustion engine and
assembly lines.
The new manpower couldn't dedicate to agriculture due to the lack of land; besides, this was not needed neither because the higher productivity
mechanized farming granted allowed a single
peasant to feed a bigger number of otherwise employed
workers. On the other hands, new agriculture technics rised the demand for
machines and other
hardware, traditionally provided by the
urban artisans. Artisans, collectively called
bourgeoisie, employed
rural exodus' workers to increase their output and meet the country's needs. The growth of their
business coupled with the lack of experience of the new workers pushed to a
rationalization and
standardization of the duties the in
workshops, thus leading to a
division of work, that is, a primitive form of
Fordism.
The process of creating a
good was divided into simple tasks, each one of them being gradually mechanized in order to boost the
productivity, therefore the
income. The accumulation of
capital allowed
investments in the
conception and application of new technologies, enabling the industrialization process to self-sustain.
The mechanization of production spread to the countries surronding England in
western and
northern Europe and to British's
settling colonies, making those areas the wealthiest since, and shaping what is now know as the
Western world.
Incidentally, the possession of
exploitation colonies eased the accumulation of capital to the countries that possessed them, speeding up their
development. The consequence was that the
subject country integrated a bigger
economic system in a subaltern position, emulating the countryside who demand manufactured goods and offers raw materials, while the
metropole stressed its urban posture, providing goods and importing food. A classical exemple of this mechanism is the
triangular trade, who involved England, southern United States and western Africa. This polarity still affects the world, and deeply retarded the industrialization of what is now know as the
Third world.
Other developed countries
After the humiliation
Japan suffered by the hand of the
US Navy, illustrated by the terms of the
Convention of Kanagawa,
japanese leadership decided to move foward its
fedual status in order to being able of preserving its independence. The government strongly promoted technological and industrial development wich eventually brought Japan to became a modern
wealth power.
In a similar way, after the
stranger's invasion Russia suffered during its
civil war,
Soviet Union's
centrally controlled economy decided to invest a big part of its ressources to anhance its industrial production and
infrastructures in order to assure its own survival, thus becaming a world
superpower.
The other
european communist countries followed all the same developing scheme, albeit with a less enphasis on
heavy industry.
Southern Europe countries saw a moderate industrialization period during from
fifties to the
seventies, reached through a healthy integration of the
European economy, thought their level of development, as well as those of eastern countries, don't match the western standards.
The third world
A similar state-lead developing program was pursued in virtually all the third world countries during the
Cold War, including
socialist ones, but specially in
Sub-Saharan Africa after the
decolonization period. The primary scope of those projects was to acheive
self-sufficiency through the local production of previosly
imported goods, the mechanization of agriculture and the spread of
education and
health care. However, all those experiences failed bitterly due to lack of realism: most countries didn't have a pre-industrial bourgeoisie able to carry on a
capitalistic development or even a stable and peacefull state. Those aborted experiences left
huge debts toward western countries and fueled
public corruption.
Petrol productors countries
Oil-rich countries saw similar failures in their economic choices. The oil being both important and expensive, regions with big reserves have huge liquidity income. However this was rarely followed by economic development. Experience shows that local
elites are unable to re-invest the
petrodollars obtained through oil export, and currency is wasted in
luxury goods. This is particularly evident in the
Persian Gulf states, where the
per capita income is comparable to those of western nations, but where none industrialization has started. Apart from two little countries (
Bahrain and
United Arab Emirates),
Arab states didn't
diversifyed their economies, and no remplacement for the
upcoming end of oil reserves is envisaged.
Asia
A totally different pattern was followed in
East Asia, who is experiencing an accelerate industrialisation. In the
sixties a network of small private-owned factories spread across four small countries known as the
Asian tigers, focusing their activities on the
export to
rich countries of low
value added goods. This specialization, allowed by the existence of stable governments and
well structured societies, was favoured by a low
workforce cost, a favorable
exchange rate, and low
custom duties. Because the success of those initial policies, in recent years the Asian tigers are trying to stepping forward this stage and diversifying theirs economies.
This starting model was afterwards successfully copied in all eastern and
southern asian countries, included
communist ones. The dimensions of this phenomenon leads to a huge wave of
offshoring, that is, western
factories or
tertiary corporations choice to move their activities to poor countries where the workforce is less expensive and less
collectively organized.
China and
India, while roughly following this development pattern, were forced to adopt, because their wheight, specific policies. China's government is actively investing in expand its own infrastuctures and securing its energy and raw materials supplying channels, is supporting its exports by financing the
United States balance payement deficit through the purchase or US treasure
bonds, and is strengthening its
military in order to endorse a major
geopolitical role. India's governement is investing in specific vanguard economic sectors such as
bioengineering,
nuclear technology,
pharmaceutics,
informatics or technologically-oriented
higher education, openly overpassing its needs, with the goal of creating several specialization poles able to conquer foreign markets.
China and India, also, started to make huge investments in third countries, making them active actors of today's world economy.
Other countries
In recent years, other countries like
Mexico,
Brazil or
Turkey have experienced a moderate industrial growth, fueled by exportations to biggers economies like United States,
China or the
European Union respectively. They are sometimes called
newly-industrialized countries. Also most
african and
latin american nations seem to follow a similar scheme. Despite this
trend being artificially influenced by the
oil price increases, the phenomenon is not entirely new nor totally speculative (for instance see:
Maquiladora). Most analyst conclude in the next
decades the whole world will experience industrialization and
international inequality will disappear and be remplaced by merely
social inequality.
Current situation
In 2005, the USA was the largest producer of industrial output followed by Japan and China, according to
International Monetary Fund.
Currently the "international development community" (
World Bank,
OECD, many
United Nations departments and some other organisations) endorses development policies based on merely
poverty reduction, and giving access to poor populations to basic services like
drinkable water or
primary education. It does not recognize traditional industrialisation policies as being adecuated to the Third world or beneficial in the longer term, with the perception that it could only create
inefficient local industries unable to compete in a
free-trade dominated world.
See also
★
Mill town
★
Industrial revolution
Literature
★ Hobsbawm, Eric (1962): ''The Age of Revolution.'' Abacus.