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DP6856 Made in America? The New World, the Old, and the Industrial Revolution

Author(s): Gregory Clark , Kevin H O'Rourke , Alan M Taylor
Publication Date: June 2008
Keyword(s): British Industrial Revolution , colonies , Great Divergence , growth , specialisation , trade
JEL(s): F11 , F14 , F43 , N10 , N70 , O40
Programme Areas: International Trade and Regional Economics
Initiatives: Economic History
Link to this Page: www.cepr.org/pubs/dps/DP6856.asp.asp


For two decades, the consensus explanation of the British Industrial Revolution has placed technological change and the supply side at center stage, affording little or no role for demand or overseas trade. Recently, alternative explanations have placed an emphasis on the importance of trade with New World colonies, and the expanded supply of raw cotton it provided. We test both hypotheses using calibrated general equilibrium models of the British economy and the rest of the world for 1760 and 1850. Neither claim is supported. Trade was vital for the progress of the industrial revolution; but it was trade with the rest of the world, not the American colonies, that allowed Britain to export its rapidly expanding textile output and achieve growth through extreme specialization in response to shifting comparative advantage.


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