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CF 3333 Clash of Cultures
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Economic Institutions in 1450
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Introduction
Correlation between productive economy and the rise of states/empires.
Food-gathering populations: small groups, nomadic
Food-producing populations: large groups, sedentary
Horticulture, "primitive farming" … led to advanced, irrigation farming.
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Modes of Production
a way of understanding how economic
institutions connect with social, religious, and political institutions.
*kin-ordered – found in "stateless" societies. Based on
reciprocity, face-to-face economic interactions … kinship defines how you
will relate to the world. Not much specialization, is about craftsmanship.
*tributary (feudalism, "Asiatic") – dominant in the world of 1500.
"steal from the poor and give to the rich." E.g., guilds controlled prices
of goods.
*capitalism – market-dominant, supposedly the interaction of
buyers and sellers together sets the price for goods (and services).
All of these have different ways of handling people with regard to goods
and services.
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Non-state and State Societies
*bands – hunter-gatherers, small groups, egalitarian
*tribes – larger than bands, have some subdivisions
*chiefdoms – usually sedentary, non-egalitarian
*states – distinctive feature: "the presence of political leaders
who maintain a socially approved monopoly on the legal use of legitimate
force" (E. Service). High degree of specialization.
The emergence of the modern nation-state is a major feature of world
affairs during 1450-1850.
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Sectors of the Economy
*primary sector – extractive, e.g., mining, fishing, farming. Far
more people were involved in the primary sector in 1450 than today.
*secondary sector – transformative, e.g., turning cotton into
fabric into clothing. Industrial Revolution has a lot to do with moving
people from the primary to the secondary sector.
*tertiary sector – services, e.g., banking, sales.
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Economic Transformations
Shift in the relative importance of these sectors is a key to
understanding the transformations 1450-1850. Those (nations, states) who
make the transition first have a real advantage.
*production – early, family/kin setting, everyone is a producer.
Families as production units, not just consumption units
*distribution – moving goods through the system, e.g., merchant
families / firms
*consumption – economy works because we spend
The division in life experience has become greater between producing,
distributing, consuming. Most of us in the present are only
consumers. Another change since 1450.
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