Wallerstein - The Modern World System
Incorporation of new zones that were in the external arena
The pace of incorporation accelerated
This incorporation derived from the need of the world economy to expand its boundaries
Production processes change + respond to the market
Incorporation vs. peripheralization
Changes:
Nature of the trade
Port of trade
Strength of the state machinery in the external arena
Long-term imbalance of trade
Production process changes:
New pattern of exports/imports
Larger economic enterprises
Increase in the coercion of the labour force
Cash-crop agriculture + reduction/elimination of local manufacturing activities
More exports than imports
Raw materials products: indigo, silk, opium, cotton
Slaves as exports declined and were replaced by raw materials exports → agricultural products
Pattern of exports from West Africa to Europe
Emergence of a multitiered structure of traders
Coercion of labour
Outward ripple of expansion: as a given zone is incorporated into the world economy, this leads to an adjacent further zone being pulled into the external arena
External arena: zone from which capitalist world economy wanted goods but which was resistant to importing manufactured goods in return and strong enough politically to maintain its preferences
Incorporation into the world economy: insertion of the political structures into the interstate system
Ideal situation: state structures that are neither too strong nor too weak
As a zone was incorporated, its trade moved from being at great risk to something promoted and protected by the interstate system
The outcomes at the end of incorporation turned out to be less different than the starting points
There are not multiple capitalist states but one capitalist world system and to be part of it, one has minimally to be integrated into its production networks or commodity chains, and be located in states that participate in the interstate system which forms the political superstructure of this capitalist world economy.
Incorporation is the period of integration
Incorporation of new zones that were in the external arena
The pace of incorporation accelerated
This incorporation derived from the need of the world economy to expand its boundaries
Production processes change + respond to the market
Incorporation vs. peripheralization
Changes:
Nature of the trade
Port of trade
Strength of the state machinery in the external arena
Long-term imbalance of trade
Production process changes:
New pattern of exports/imports
Larger economic enterprises
Increase in the coercion of the labour force
Cash-crop agriculture + reduction/elimination of local manufacturing activities
More exports than imports
Raw materials products: indigo, silk, opium, cotton
Slaves as exports declined and were replaced by raw materials exports → agricultural products
Pattern of exports from West Africa to Europe
Emergence of a multitiered structure of traders
Coercion of labour
Outward ripple of expansion: as a given zone is incorporated into the world economy, this leads to an adjacent further zone being pulled into the external arena
External arena: zone from which capitalist world economy wanted goods but which was resistant to importing manufactured goods in return and strong enough politically to maintain its preferences
Incorporation into the world economy: insertion of the political structures into the interstate system
Ideal situation: state structures that are neither too strong nor too weak
As a zone was incorporated, its trade moved from being at great risk to something promoted and protected by the interstate system
The outcomes at the end of incorporation turned out to be less different than the starting points
There are not multiple capitalist states but one capitalist world system and to be part of it, one has minimally to be integrated into its production networks or commodity chains, and be located in states that participate in the interstate system which forms the political superstructure of this capitalist world economy.
Incorporation is the period of integration