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Chapter 16 The Decentralization of Industry Part 1 After the Napoleonic Wars, Britain all but succeeded in ruining the main industries which had sprung up in France at the end of the preceding century.
She became also mistress of the seas and had no rival of importance.She took into this situation and knew how to turnist privileges and advantages to account.
She established an industrial monopoly and, imposing upon her neighbors her prices for the goods she alone could manufacture, accumulated riches upon riches.
But as the middle-class revolution of the 18th century abolished serfdom and created a proletariat in France, industry, hampered for a time in its flight, soared again, and from the second half of the 19th century France ceased to be a tributary of England for manufactured goods.
Today she too has grown into a nation with an export trade.She sells far more than 60 million pounds worth of manufactured goods, and two-thirds of these goods are fabrics.
The number of Frenchmen working for export or living by their foreign trade is estimated at 3 millions. France is therefore no longer England's tributary.
In turn, she has striven to monopolize certain branches of foreign industry, such as silk and ready-made cloths, and has reaped immense profits therefrom.
But she is on the point of losing the monopoly forever, as England is on the point of losing the monopoly of cotton goods.Traveling eastwards, industry has reached Germany.
Fifty years ago, Germany was a tributary of England and France for most manufactured commodities in the higher branches of industry.It is no longer so.
In the course of the last 45 years, and especially since the Franco-German War, Germany has completely reorganized her industry.
New factories are stocked with the best machinery, the latest creation of industrial art and cotton goods from Manchester, or insokes from Lyons, etc. are now realized in recent German factories.
It took two or three generations of workers at Lyons and Manchester to construct the modern machinery, but Germany adopted it in its perfect state.Technical schools adapted to the needs of industry.
Supply the factories with an army of intelligent workmen, practicing engineers, who can work with hand and brain.
German industry starts at the point which was only reached by Manchesters and Lyon after fifty years of groping in the dark, of exertion and experiments.
It follows that as Germany manufactures as well at home, she diminishes her imports from France and England year by year.She has not only become their rival in manufactured goods in Asia and in Africa, but also in London and in Paris.
Short-sighted people may cry out against the Frankfurt Treaty.They may explain German competition by little differences in railway tariff.They may linger on the petty side of questions and neglect great historical facts.
But it is nonetheless clear that the main industries, formerly in the hands of England and France, had progressed eastward, and in Germany they found a country, young, full of energy, possessing an intelligent middle class, and eager in its turn to enrich itself by foreign trade.
While Germany freed itself from subjection to France and England, manufactured her own cotton cloth, constructed her own machines, in fact manufactured all commodities,
The main industries took also root in Russia, where the development of manufacture is the more surprising as it sprang up but yesterday.At the time of the abolition of serfdom in 1861, Russia hardly had any factories.
Everything they needed, machines, rails, railway engines, rich materials, came from the West. 20 years later, she possessed already 85,000 factories, and the goods from these factories had increased fourfold in value.
The old machinery was superseded, and now nearly all the steel in use in Russia, three-quarters of the iron, two-thirds of the coal, all railway engines, railway carriages, rails, nearly all steamers, are made in Russia.
Russia, destined, so wrote Economist, to remain an agricultural territory, has rapidly developed into a manufacturing country.She orders hardly anything from England, and very little from Germany.
Economists hold the customs responsible for these facts, and yet cotton manufactured in Russia are sold at the same price as in London, capital taking no cognizance of fatherland.
German and England capitalists, accompanied by engineers and foremen of their own nationalities, have introduced in Russia and in Poland manufacturies, the excellence of whose goods compete with the best from England.
If customs were abolished tomorrow, manufacture would only gain by it. Not long ago, the British manufacturers delivered another hard blow to the imports of cloth and woolens from the West.
They set up in southern and middle Russia immense wool factories, stocked with the most perfect machinery from Bradford.And already now, Russia hardly imports more than a few pieces of English cloth and French woolen fabrics as samples.
The main industries not only move eastward, they are spreading to the southern peninsulas.Turin Excavation of 1884 has already shown the progress made in Italian manufactured produce, and let us not make any mistake about it.
The mutual hatred of the French and Italian middle classes has no other origin than their industrial rivalry.Spain is also becoming an industrial country.
While in the East, Bohemia has suddenly sprung up to importance as the new center of manufacture, provided with perfected machinery and applying the best scientific methods.
We might also mention Hungary's rapid progress in the main industries, but let us rather take Brazil as an example.
Economists sentenced Brazil to cultivate cotton forever, to export it in its raw state, and to receive cotton cloth from Europe in exchange. In fact, 40 years ago, Brazil had only 9 wretched little cotton factories with 385 spindles.
Today, there are 108 cotton mills, possessing 715,000 spindles and 26,050 looms. which toll both 234 million yards of textiles on the market annually.Even Mexico is setting about manufacturing cotton cloth instead of importing it from Europe.
As to the United States, they have quite freed themselves from European tutelage and have triumphantly developed their manufacturing powers.But it was India which gave the most striking proof against the specialization of national industry.
The great European nations need colonies, for colonies send raw material, cotton fiber, unwashed wool, spices, etc., to the motherland, and the motherland, under pretense of sending them manufactured wares, gets rid of her burnt stuffs, her machined scrap iron and everything which she no longer has use for.
It costs her little or nothing, and nonetheless the articles are sold at exorbitant prices. Such was the theory.Such was the practice for a long time.In London and Manchester, fortunes were made while India was being ruined.
In the India Museum in London, unheard of riches, collected in Calcutta and Bombay by English merchants, are to be seen.
But other English merchants and capitalists conceived the very simple idea that it would be more expedient to exploit the natives of India by making cotton cloth in India itself than to import from 20 to 24 million pounds worth of goods annually.
At first, a series of experiments ended in failure.Indian weavers, artists and experts in their own craft, could not inure themselves to factory life.The machinery sent from Liverpool was bad.The climate had to be taken into account.
Merchants had to adapt themselves to new conditions. now fully observed, before British India could become the menacing rival of the motherland she is today.
She now possesses 200 cotton factories, which employ about 196,400 workmen, and contains 5,231,000 spindles and 48,400 looms and 38 jute mills, with 409,000 spindles.
She exports annually to China, to the Dutch Indies, and to Africa, nearly 8 million pounds worth of the same white cloth said to be England's specialty.
While English workmen are unemployed and in great want, Indian women weave cotton by machinery for the Far East at the rate of six pence a day.
In short, intelligent manufacturers are fully aware that the day is not far off when they will not know what to do with the factory hands, who formerly weaved cotton cloth exported from England.
Besides which it is becoming more and more evident that India will not import a single ton of iron from England.
The initial difficulties in using the coal and the iron ore obtained in India have been overcome, and foundries, rivaling those in England, have been built on the shores of the Indian Ocean.
Colonies competing with the motherland in its production of manufactured goods.Such is the factor which will regulate economies in the 20th century.And why should India not manufacture?What should be the hindrance?Capital?
But capital goes wherever there are men, poor enough to be exploited.Knowledge?But knowledge recognizes no national barriers.Technical skill of the worker?No.
Are then Hindu workmen inferior to the 237,000 boys and girls, not 18 years old, at present working in English textile factories?Part 2 After having glanced at national industries, it would be very interesting to turn to special industries.
Let us take silk, for example, an eminently French product in the first half of the 19th century.We all know how Lyons became the emporium of the silk trade.
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At first, raw silk was gathered in southern France, so little by little they ordered it from Italy, from Spain, from Austria, from the Caucasus, and from Japan, for the manufacture of their silk fabrics.
In 1875, out of 5 million kilos of raw silk converted into stuffs in the vicinity of Lyons, there were only 400,000 kilos of French silk.But if Lyons manufactured imported silk, why should not Switzerland, Germany, Russia do as much?
Silk weaving developed indeed in the villages around Zurich.Vail became a great center of the silk trade.
The Caucasian administration engaged women from Marseilles and workmen from Lyons to teach Georgians the perfected rearing of silkworms, and the art of converting silk into fabrics to the Caucasian peasants.
Austria followed, then Germany, with the help of Lyons' workmen, built great silk factories.The United States did likewise in Paterson. And today, the silk trade is no longer a French monopoly.
Silks are made in Germany, in Austria, in the United States, and in England.In winter, Caucasian peasants weave silk handkerchiefs at a wage that would mean starvation to the silk weavers of Lyons.
Italy sends silk to France and Lyons, which in 1870 to 1874 exported 460 million francs worth of silk fabrics, exports now only one half of that amount.
In fact, the time is not far off when Lyons will only send higher class goods and a few novelties as patterns to Germany, Russia, and Japan.And so it is in all industries.Belgium has no longer the cloth monopoly.
Cloth is made in Germany, in Russia, in Austria, in the United States.Switzerland and the French Jura no longer have a clockwork monopoly.Watches are made everywhere. Scotland no longer refines sugar for Russia.Russian sugar is imported into England.
Italy, although neither possessing coal nor iron, makes its own iron clads and engines for her steamers.Chemical industry is no longer an English monopoly.Sulfuric acid and soda are made even in the Euros.
Steam engines, made at Winterthur, have acquired everywhere a wide reputation.And at the present moment, Switzerland, that has neither coal nor iron, nothing but excellent technical schools, makes machinery better and cheaper than England.
So ends the theory of exchange.The tendency of trade, as for all else, is towards decentralization.
Every nation finds it advantageous to combine agriculture with the greatest possible variety of foundries and manufactories, the specialization of which economists spoke so highly, in which the number of capitalists but is now of no use.
On the contrary, it is to the advantage of every region, every nation, to grow their own wheat, their own vegetables, and to manufacture all produce they consume at home.
This diversity is the surest pledge of the complete development of production by mutual cooperation, and the moving cause of progress, while specialization is a hindrance to progress.
Agriculture can only prosper in proximity to factories, and no sooner does a single factory appear than an infinite variety of other factories must spring up around, so that, mutually supporting and stimulating one another by their inventions, they increase their productivity.
It is foolish indeed to export wheat and import flour, to export wool and import cloth, to export iron and import machinery, not only because transportation is a waste of time and money, but above all because a country with no developed industry inevitably remains behind the times in agriculture, because a country with no large factories to bring steel to a finished condition is also backward in all other industries.
And lastly, because the industrial and technical capacities of the nation remain undeveloped. In the world of production everything holds together nowadays.
Cultivation of the soil is no longer possible without machinery, without great irrigation works, without railways, without manure factories.
And to adapt this machinery, these railways, these irrigation engines, etc., to local conditions, a certain spirit of invention, a certain amount of technical skill, that lie dormant as long as spades and plowshares are the only implements of cultivation, must be developed.
If fields are to be properly cultivated, and are to yield the abundant harvest man has the right to expect, it is essential that workshops, foundries, and factories develop within the reach of the fields.
A variety of occupations, a variety of skill arising therefrom, and working together for the common aim.These are the genuine forces of progress.
And now let us imagine the inhabitants of a city or territory, whether vast or small, stepping for the first time onto the path of the social revolution.We are sometimes told that nothing will have changed, that the mines, the factories, etc.
will be expropriated and proclaimed national or communal property, that every man will go back to his usual work, and that the revolution will then be accomplished. But this is a dream.The social revolution cannot take place so simply.
We have already mentioned that should the revolution break out tomorrow in Paris, Lyon, or any other city, should the workers lay hands on factories, houses, and banks, present production would be completely revolutionized by this simple fact.
International commerce will come to a standstill, so also will the importation of foreign breadstuffs, the circulation of commodities and of provisions will be paralyzed.
And then, the city or territory in revolt will be compelled to provide for itself, and to reorganize production.If it fails to do so, it is death.If it succeeds, it will revolutionize the economic life of the country.
The quantity of imported provisions having decreased, consumption having increased, one million Parisians working for exportation purposes have been thrown out of work, a great number of things imported today from distant or neighboring countries not reaching their destination, fancy trade being temporarily at a standstill.
What will the inhabitants have to eat six months after the revolution? We think that when the stores are empty, the masses will seek to obtain their food from the land.
They will be compelled to cultivate the soil, to combine agricultural production with industrial production in Paris and its environs.They will have to abandon the merely ornamental trades and consider the most urgent need, bread.
Citizens will be obliged to become agriculturalists, not in the same manner as peasants who wear themselves out, ploughing for a wage that barely provides them with sufficient food for the year, but by following the principles of market gardeners' intensive agriculture, applied on a large scale by means of the best machinery that man has invented or can invent.
They will till the land, not, however, like the country beast of burden a Paris jeweler would object to that.
They will reorganize cultivation, not in ten years' time, but at once during the revolutionary struggles, from fear of being worsted by the enemy.
Agriculture will have to be carried on by intelligent beings, availing themselves of their knowledge, organizing themselves in joyous gangs for pleasant work, like the men who, a hundred years ago, worked in the Champ de Mar, for the feast of the Federation, a work of delight, when not carried to excess, when scientifically organized, when man invents and improves his tools and is conscious of being a useful member of the community.
Of course, they will not only cultivate, they will also produce those things which they formerly used to order from foreign parts.
And let us not forget that for the inhabitants of a revolted territory, foreign parts may include all districts that have not joined in the revolutionary movement.
During the revolutions of 1793 and 1871, Paris was made to feel that foreign parts meant even the country district at her very gates.
The speculator in grains at Troy starved the sans-culottes of Paris more effectually than the German armies brought on French soil by the Versailles conspirators.The revolted city will be compelled to do without foreigners, and why not?
France invented beet-root sugar when sugarcane ran short during the continental blockade.Parisians discovered saltpeter in their cellars when they no longer received any from abroad.
Shall we be inferior to our grandfathers, who with difficulty lisped the first words of science?A revolution is more than the destruction of a political system.
It implies the awakening of human intelligence, the increasing of the inventive spirit tenfold, a hundredfold.It is the dawn of a new science, the science of men like Laplace, Lamarck, Lavoisier.
It is a revolution in the minds of men more than in their institutions. An economist tell us to return to our workshops, as if passing through a revolution, we're going home after a walk in the ebbing forest.
To begin with, the sole fact of having laid hands on middle-class property implies the necessity of completely reorganizing the whole economic life in workshops, in dockyards, and in factories.
and the revolution will not fail to act in this direction.
Should Paris, during the social revolution, be cut off from the world for a year or two by the supporters of middle-class rule, its millions of intellects not yet depressed by factory life, that city of little trades which stimulate the spirit of invention, will show the world what man's brain can accomplish without asking any help from without.
but the motor force of the sun that gives light, the power of the wind that sweeps away impurities, and the silent life-forces at work in the earth we tread on.
We shall see, then, what a variety of trades, mutually cooperating on a spot of the globe and animated by the social revolution, can do to feed, clothe, house, and supply with all manner of luxuries millions of intelligent men.
We need write no fiction to prove this.
What we are sure of, what has already been experimented upon, and recognized as practical, would suffice to carry it into effect if the attempt were fertilized, vivified by the daring inspiration of the revolution and the spontaneous impulse of the masses.