Book contents
- Frontmatter
- CHAPTER I Introduction: The Inputs for Growth
- BRITAIN
- FRANCE
- CHAPTER V Capital Investment and Economic Growth in France, 1820–1930
- CHAPTER VI Labour in the French Economy since the Revolution
- CHAPTER VII Entrepreneurship and Management in France in the Nineteenth Century
- GERMANY
- SCANDINAVIA
- BIBLIOGRAPHIES
- References
CHAPTER V - Capital Investment and Economic Growth in France, 1820–1930
from FRANCE
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 March 2008
- Frontmatter
- CHAPTER I Introduction: The Inputs for Growth
- BRITAIN
- FRANCE
- CHAPTER V Capital Investment and Economic Growth in France, 1820–1930
- CHAPTER VI Labour in the French Economy since the Revolution
- CHAPTER VII Entrepreneurship and Management in France in the Nineteenth Century
- GERMANY
- SCANDINAVIA
- BIBLIOGRAPHIES
- References
Summary
The General Argument
Until quite recently, studies of capital formation in France were few in number and relatively cursory. This lacuna was of little importance: it seemed that the findings to be expected of such research were already well known. It was thought that the level of economic growth and of investment had remained below the level which technical advance made it possible to reach – or so it seemed from a comparison with the relevant figures for other countries or even with those for France during the earlier part of the nineteenth century. For of all the countries that underwent industrialization France was one of the few to experience an early and lasting break in development. François Perroux was the first to identify the problem. ‘About 1860’, he writes, ‘there appeared the first signs of a slowing-down of the economy; from 1880, this became a pronounced trend.’ The rate of growth fell, and this falling-off had long-lasting effects on the economy, for during its early stages – the period 1892–1914 – the second phase of industrialization was ‘much less vigorous than the first’. Various arguments have been put forward to explain this deceleration. Two of them, related to the state of the economy, have gained general acceptance in the past.
Underinvestment, runs the argument, was connected, in the first place, to the shortness of the periods during which long-term planning was possible. At the very beginning of the nineteenth century, France already laboured under this disadvantage: the stagnation of agricultural productivity and the decline in international trade had paralysed industry throughout the thirty years of insecurity and of war which lasted until 1820.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Cambridge Economic History of Europe , pp. 231 - 295Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1978
References
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