How the development of legal and financial institutions transformed
Britain into the world’s first capitalist country Modern capitalism
emerged in England in the eighteenth century and ushered in the
Industrial Revolution, though scholars have long debated why. Some
attribute the causes to technological change while others point to the
Protestant ethic, liberal ideas, and cultural change. The Wealth of a
Nation reveals the crucial developments in legal and financial
institutions in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries that help to
explain this dramatic transformation. Offering new perspectives on the
early history of capitalism, Geoffrey Hodgson describes how, for the
emerging British economy, pressures from without were as important as
evolution from within. He shows how intensive military conflicts
overseas forced the state to undertake major financial,
administrative, legal, and political reforms. The resulting
institutional changes not only bolstered the British war
machine—they fostered the Industrial Revolution. Hodgson traces how
Britain’s war capitalism led to an expansion of its empire and a
staggering increase in the slave trade, and how the institutional
innovations that radically transformed the British economy were copied
and adapted by countries around the world. A landmark work of
scholarship, The Wealth of a Nation sheds light on how external
factors such as war gave rise to institutional arrangements that
facilitated finance, banking, and investment, and offers a conceptual
framework for further research into the origins and consolidation of
capitalism in England.
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Institutional Foundations of English Capitalism
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780691247519
Publisert
2023
Utgiver
Vendor
Princeton University Press
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter