The Economics Book

(Barry) #1

178


INDUSTRIALIZATION


CREATES SUSTAINED


GROWTH


THE EMERGENCE OF MODERN ECONOMIES


T


he Russian-born economist
Simon Kuznets described
the emergence of the
modern economy as a controlled
revolution—in which the factory
replaces the farm. The resulting
higher living standards require
economic and social changes that
run deeper than might at first be
suggested by a simple, numerical
rate of growth. Kuznets called this

IN CONTEXT


FOCUS
Growth and development

KEY THINKER
Simon Kuznets (1901–85)

BEFORE
1750s French economist
François Quesnay states that
wealth comes from agriculture,
not from industry.

1940 British-Australian
economist Colin Clark argues
that economic growth involves
a shift from agriculture to
manufacturing and to services.

AFTER
1967 US economist Edward
Denison highlights the
important contribution of
technological change and
productivity growth to
economic growth.

1975 US economists Hollis
Chenery and Moshe Syrquin
find evidence that as
agriculture declines,
economies grow, and then
industry and services increase.

With new technology
and the growth
of manufacturing...

Workers benefit from
learning and contribute
toward cultural change
and business growth.

Succeeding generations
continue to benefit from
these cultural and
industrial advances.

Industrialized work
requires more skill
and education than
agricultural work.

... people increasingly
move from rural areas
to the cities for work.

Industrialization
creates sustained
growth.

process “modern economic
growth,” and showed how success
in achieving this is what sets
rich countries apart from the rest.
The key characteristic of Kuznets’
growth theory is that income per
person grows rapidly, even in the
face of an expanding population:
there are more people and they are
richer. This expansion is driven by
the spread of factories and machines.
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