Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 August 2009
Introduction
It was not that British savers were born with a lesser degree of aversion to uncertainty than their counterparts in the four frontier countries, it was simply that Britain had begun to develop earlier, and by the middle of the nineteenth century the process of educating savers had proceeded much further than it had in the outlands. Although a double-digit savings rate was not achieved until the early decades of that century, capital had been accumulating in trade and commerce for at least 300 years. It may well have been true, as Postan has noted, that at least two fifteenth-century families could have provided all the finance required to fund the entire Industrial Revolution. However, those (and other elite) families chose not to redirect their existing portfolios, to meet either the relatively small demands of the manufacturing sector – demands that were met largely out of retained earnings – or, much more importantly, the demands for supporting investment in infrastructure, particularly canal construction.
Although her findings have been subject to criticism, Elise S. Brezis has concluded that from 1740 to the end of the century the national savings rate, although rising, rose by substantially less than the investment rate. As a result, for the century as a whole, given the level of military expenditures, domestic savings were insufficient to finance the observed level of investment, and there was a need for foreign capital imports.
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