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Creative Destruction and Partial Obsolescence in American Economic Development*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 February 2011

W. Paul Strassmann
Affiliation:
Michigan State University

Extract

With the growing emphasis on structural change and Schumpeterian innovation in economic development, the paradoxical concept “creative destruction” has come into wide use among economists and economic historians. It is an appealing concept because it recalls the death and birth cycles of nature and various tribal myths of gods shuttling between ferocity and compassion. But the concept has been applied to economic situations rather casually. This paper suggests that “creative destruction” is not an apt description of the way dominant production methods succeeded one another in the United States from 1850 to 1914, even though the term is applled to this era more than to any other. Data are presented to show that apparently obsolete methods survived and grew in the face of novel competition. An explanation of the staying power of partially outdated production methods is attempted.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The Economic History Association 1959

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References

1 The rain-gods, Jupiter and Thor, once made fields grow and yet hurled their thunderbolts. Demeter, goddess of grain and harvests in Greece, every winter abandoned her daughter Persephone, to Pluto, king of the multitudinous dead. The Hindu goddess Shakti is personified both as Uma, a smiling mother offering help to all creatures, and as Kali, goddess of floods, earthquakes, and epidemics, wearing a garland of skulls and shown in temple images with blood dripping from her mouth.

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