SHOE Archives

Societies for the History of Economics

SHOE@YORKU.CA

Options: Use Forum View

Use Monospaced Font
Show HTML Part by Default
Show All Mail Headers

Message: [<< First] [< Prev] [Next >] [Last >>]
Topic: [<< First] [< Prev] [Next >] [Last >>]
Author: [<< First] [< Prev] [Next >] [Last >>]

Print Reply
Subject:
From:
Humberto Barreto <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Societies for the History of Economics <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Fri, 10 Feb 2023 13:02:45 -0500
Content-Type:
multipart/alternative
Parts/Attachments:
text/plain (8 kB) , text/html (8 kB)
Published by EH.Net (February 2023).

Stephen Broadberry and Kyoji Fukao, eds. *The Cambridge Economic History of
the Modern World: Volume I, 1700 to 1870*. Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press, 2021. xvi + 490 pp. £20 (hardcover), ISBN 978-1107159457.

Reviewed for EH.Net by Albert Carreras, Full Professor, Department of
Economics and Business, Pompeu Fabra University.



As the first of the two volumes of the *Cambridge Economic History of the
Modern World* (*CEHMW*), this book covers 1700 to 1870. In title and format
it bears a strong similarity to the *Cambridge Economic History of Modern
Europe* (*CEHME*), also co-edited by Stephen Broadberry and divided into
two volumes the same way: 1700-1870 and 1870-present. In both cases, there
is an explicit attempt to systematically cover all countries and regions,
not just the major ones. To stress the universal coverage, the two
*CEHMW* volumes
are mostly organized geographically. This volume’s nineteen chapters are
divided into two parts. The first part’s eleven chapters cover \”regional
developments\” and the second part’s eight chapters cover \”factors
governing performance differentials in the global economy.\” Both volumes
are organized almost exactly in the same way and include useful
“Introductions” by the two editors, summarizing forcefully their purpose,
organization, and contents.

The worldwide scope is the main success of the two volumes. A group of
top-level contributors cover, in a well-integrated and cohesive manner,
eleven major world regions, with some subtle differences between the first
volume and the second (already reviewed in EH.Net). Volume one starts with
a chapter by Stephen Broadberry, “Britain, the Industrial Revolution and
Modern Economic Growth”, which sets the standard for all the other regional
chapters, orderly reviewing the themes addressed in both volumes. It
is the *pièce
de résistance* of the whole *CEHMW*. The second chapter, by Giovanni
Federico and Andrei Markevich, is on “Continental Europe” and closely
follows Broadberry’s pattern. The volume then turns its focus to Asia, with
“Tokugawa Japan and the Foundations of Modern Economic Growth in Asia”, by
Masaki Nakabayashi; “China: The Start of the Great Divergence”, by
Christopher Isett; “From the Mughals to the Raj: India 1700–1858”, by Anand
V. Swamy; “Sustainable Development in South East Asia”, by Jean-Pascal
Bassino; and “The Ottoman Empire, 1700- 1870”, by Sevket Pamuk. The
Americas come next, with “The Economic History of North America,
1700-1870”, by Joshua L. Rosenbloom, and “Latin America, 1700-1870”, by
Regina Grafe. The book then moves south, with “Africa: Slavery and the
World Economy, 1700-1870”, by Patrick Manning; and “Australia: Geography
and Institutions”, by David Meredith.

All these chapters attempt to follow Broadberry’s ordered checklist of
themes to be addressed and provide many useful figures and tables that
summarize high quality previous research. In some chapters the lack of data
and the need to clarify the institutional factors oblige the authors to
design simpler checklists to address less straightforward cases where
failures in state capacity building are a major issue. Even so, the China
and India chapters on the start of the Great Divergence fit in well with
the theme and the ambitions of the volume. The Japanese experience emerges
as an amazing counterexample of the dramatic Chinese and Indian failures.
The South East Asia chapter comes surprisingly close to Broadberry’s
checklist. North America and Latin America are well surveyed in chapters
that focus on the causes and impact of the independence divide, just in the
middle of the period under scrutiny. The Africa chapter is focused on the
mass enslavement and export of African populations, and a lot has been
researched recently that allows for a better drawing of the main facts. The
Australia experience follows closely North American developments.

The editors’ dedication to a global approach to the entire 1700-1870 era is
clearer still in the second part of the volume. Reviewing the “Factors
Governing Differential Outcomes in the Global Economy” would seem a much
more challenging task for 1700-1870 than afterwards. Nevertheless, it is
amazing how all the chapters manage to provide a truly world history,
mostly by focusing on the large regional units displayed in the first part
– Africa, China, India, Latin America, North America, Ottoman Empire, South
East Asia – and certain smaller countries (in surface or in population)
that deserve to be considered individually – Britain, Japan, and Australia.
Some continental European countries are mentioned individually, but not
many. In this global approach to the major issues at stake, some parts of
the world achieve a more central role than usual: China, India, and Africa.
They are not footnotes but substantive parts of all chapters. Bearing this
in mind we have two chapters on the proximate sources of growth:
\”Population and Human Development since 1700\” (Romola Davenport and Osamu
Saito) and \”Proximate Sources of Growth: Capital and Technology,
1700-1870\” (Alessandro Nuvolari and Masayuki Tanimoto). There are two
chapters on the ultimate sources of growth: \”Underlying Sources of Growth:
First and Second Nature Geography\” (Paul Caruana-Galizia, Tomoko Hashino,
and Max-Stephan Schulze) and \”Institutions\” (John Joseph Wallis).
Wallis’s chapter neatly complements Part 1 in its comparison of the
institutional consequences of the English and Castilian colonizations.

A special chapter, \”Consequences of Growth: Living Standards and
Inequality\” (Jan Luiten van Zanden, Bas van Leeuwen and Yi Xu), addresses
and quantifies the trends in indicators of human development – real income,
life expectancy and education – in all major regions, with an eye to
changes in inequality.

The last three chapters deal with the global economy: \”International
Transactions: Real Trade and Factor Flows\” (Wolfgang Keller, Markus Lampe,
and Carol H. Shiue); \”Monetary Systems and the Global Balance of Payments
Adjustment in the Pre-Gold Standard Period\” (Rui Pedro Esteves and Pilar
Nogués Marco), and \”War and Empire, 1700-1870\” (Philip T. Hoffman and
Tirthankar Roy). All three provide truly global views on the far from
peaceful making of global economic flows.

The first volume of *The Cambridge Economic History of the Modern World* is
a set of top-quality chapters and authors. As there is less tradition of a
fine-tuned chronology for 1700-1870, the absence of explicit temporal
divides is not a major issue. On the contrary, the editors have taken care
of pressing gently all the authors to provide, as much as possible, a
common set of time benchmarks for the figures and tables to be more
comparable. In a time of renewed grand views of world development, looking
for major theories of why the West became richer than the rest of the
world, this first volume provides, in a compact format, the best that the
economic history of the world that witnessed the Industrial Revolution has
to offer.



Albert Carreras is Full Professor in the Department of Economics and
Business at Pompeu Fabra University in Spain. With Xavier Tafunell, he is
the author of *Between Empire and Globalization: An Economic History of
Modern Spain* (Palgrave Studies in Economic History, 2021) and editor
of *Estadísticas
Históricas de España, Siglos XIX-XX*, 3 vols. (2005).

Copyright (c) 2023 by EH.Net. All rights reserved. This work may be copied
for non-profit educational uses if proper credit is given to the author and
the list. For other permission, please contact the EH.Net Administrator (
[log in to unmask]). Published by EH.Net (February 2023). All EH.Net
reviews are archived at http://www.eh.net/book-reviews.


ATOM RSS1 RSS2