Wood - The Origin of Capitalism
European imperialism was decisive in the process of primitive accumulation of wealth leading to capitalism
It drained the resources and halted the development of non-European economies
Only in Britain was the wealth accumulated converted into industrial capital
Everything depended on the social property relations at home in the imperial power, the conditions of systemic reproduction associated with those property relations, and the economic processes set in motion by them
No amount of colonial wealth would have had these effects without the imperatives generated by England’s domestic property relations
Appropriation was linked with squeezing more out of direct producers rather than enhancing the productivity of labour
Settlements were used to enhance trade
Outward expansion of the same capitalist imperatives that were driving the domestic market
New motives and justification for coercive dispossession
England’s Irish strategy: instant transition from feudalism to capitalism
New economy based on new social relations on the land
Agrarian capitalism
To make Ireland an economic dependency of England
Increasing labour productivity
New conceptions of property rights
Making land productive → improving it
Failure to improve = forfeiting the right of property
Justification for the colonial appropriation of unused land
Property derives from the creation of value
Agrarian capitalism: instrument of imperial domination beyond the boundaries of England
Relative value of the land + redefining the concept of waste
The imperial legitimacy of the colonial power was rooted in the productive activities of its subjects, its “improving” settlers
The colonizer was not robbing subject peoples but adding to the common good
Economic principles took on a moral and religious meaning
European imperialism was decisive in the process of primitive accumulation of wealth leading to capitalism
It drained the resources and halted the development of non-European economies
Only in Britain was the wealth accumulated converted into industrial capital
Everything depended on the social property relations at home in the imperial power, the conditions of systemic reproduction associated with those property relations, and the economic processes set in motion by them
No amount of colonial wealth would have had these effects without the imperatives generated by England’s domestic property relations
Appropriation was linked with squeezing more out of direct producers rather than enhancing the productivity of labour
Settlements were used to enhance trade
Outward expansion of the same capitalist imperatives that were driving the domestic market
New motives and justification for coercive dispossession
England’s Irish strategy: instant transition from feudalism to capitalism
New economy based on new social relations on the land
Agrarian capitalism
To make Ireland an economic dependency of England
Increasing labour productivity
New conceptions of property rights
Making land productive → improving it
Failure to improve = forfeiting the right of property
Justification for the colonial appropriation of unused land
Property derives from the creation of value
Agrarian capitalism: instrument of imperial domination beyond the boundaries of England
Relative value of the land + redefining the concept of waste
The imperial legitimacy of the colonial power was rooted in the productive activities of its subjects, its “improving” settlers
The colonizer was not robbing subject peoples but adding to the common good
Economic principles took on a moral and religious meaning