Book contents
- Multicultural Origins of the Global Economy
- Multicultural Origins of the Global Economy
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Acknowledgements
- 1 Mapping a New Global Political Economy
- Part I Multicultural Origins of the First (Historical Capitalist) Global Economy, 1500–1850
- Part II What Was Global about the First Global Economy, 1500–c. 1850?
- Part III Empire and the First Global Economy in the Making of Modern Industrial Capitalism, 1500–1800
- Part IV The Second Great Divergence, 1600–1800: Differing ‘Developmental Architectures’ in Global Contexts
- 11 Why Britain Initiated a Cotton Industrialisation and Why India and China Did Not
- 12 Why Britain Initiated an Iron and Steel Industrialisation and Why India (Mysore) and China Did Not
- Part V Rehabilitating and Provincialising Western Imperialism: Afro-Asians inside and outside the Shadow of Empire
- Book part
- Bibliography
- Index
11 - Why Britain Initiated a Cotton Industrialisation and Why India and China Did Not
from Part IV - The Second Great Divergence, 1600–1800: Differing ‘Developmental Architectures’ in Global Contexts
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 17 December 2020
- Multicultural Origins of the Global Economy
- Multicultural Origins of the Global Economy
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Acknowledgements
- 1 Mapping a New Global Political Economy
- Part I Multicultural Origins of the First (Historical Capitalist) Global Economy, 1500–1850
- Part II What Was Global about the First Global Economy, 1500–c. 1850?
- Part III Empire and the First Global Economy in the Making of Modern Industrial Capitalism, 1500–1800
- Part IV The Second Great Divergence, 1600–1800: Differing ‘Developmental Architectures’ in Global Contexts
- 11 Why Britain Initiated a Cotton Industrialisation and Why India and China Did Not
- 12 Why Britain Initiated an Iron and Steel Industrialisation and Why India (Mysore) and China Did Not
- Part V Rehabilitating and Provincialising Western Imperialism: Afro-Asians inside and outside the Shadow of Empire
- Book part
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Chapter 11 is the first of two that explains why Britain industrialized and why China and India did not. They provide a non-Eurocentric answer to the famous ‘Needham problem’, which boils down to asking ‘why China (and to an extent India), which had been a pioneer of technological development for over two millennia failed to industrialize whereas Britain, which had been a laggard for several millennia, succeeded? To answer this I bring out surprising resemblances and differences in the ‘developmental architectures’ of the three aforementioned countries, which factors in state-society relations and the modes of: production, empire, warfare, taxation and epistemic construction. In this chapter, I argue that differing global and domestic contexts can account for the ‘second great divergence’ in cotton-textile production. In essence, my solution to the ‘Needham problem’ is two-fold: first, neither China nor India were on a trajectory into a cotton-based industrial capitalism owing to the nature of their developmental architectures, especially the nature of their systems of production and class relations. Second, there was neither a desire nor a need to industrialize partly because there was an absence of imperial- and global-economic pressures and partly because these societies were ‘historical capitalist satisficers’.
Keywords
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Multicultural Origins of the Global EconomyBeyond the Western-Centric Frontier, pp. 317 - 352Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2020