Stas Bush wrote:Iron Bridge wrote:Also, you're answering my questions now.
Not the ones asked before, but sure. The problem is the backpedal mode you use - when I point out that India did not have industry and you should't make statements that infrastructure equals industry (since it says nothing about where the manufacturing complex is located), you say you meant something different; not "had industry". When I say that NZ was not "much poorer" than Australia or Canada, you immediately backpedal and say that it
became slightly poorer during the period (which I think is pretty much irrelevant; I was talking about NZ's transition to industry from agriculture, the fact that they managed to execute this transition smoothly, only slightly falling behind other Western offshoots in growth tempoes, is just a tangent). So you ignore the points, frame your statements incorrectly, then correct them post-facto without admitting that you were wrong. See a problem?
I had never claimed that India was industrialised, rather my entire point was that despite having some small pieces of industrial technology, it was
not industrialised. My point was that the fundamentally important process behind "industrialisation" was the increase in productivity of an economy, not the presence or not of particular technologies. There's no backpedaling; rather, you did not read or correctly understand the post you were replying to. We weren't even disagreeing at all!
Similarly, in the case of NZ, you start off claiming that NZ is an example of a western offshoot that adopted "Peronism" (or something you thought was close to it) and yet still industrialised, meaning, I guess, that industrialisation happens because you're part of the World Anglo Conspiracy rather than because you have free market institutions. When it's pointed out that NZ 1. did not adopt anything like Peronism 2. by its more modest leftward shift, did in fact lose ground against all the other Anglo off-shoots and became the poorest of them, you ignore these two below-the-waterline holes in your argument and instead nitpick about my use of the word "much". Even if I'm wrong to say NZ was
much poorer than Australia, and should instead have said "somewhat" or something, it doesn't make a blindest bit of difference to the debate and doesn't do anything to save your argument!
So never mind my alleged backpeddling; I rather am not impressed with your turning to deflection whenever you can't answer the salient point. Thanas, while still not ultimately correct, made a much more credible critique than you have.
Iron Bridge wrote:The USSR, as I've already demonstrated, did not much improve on Tsarist Russia's relative levels of economic development, remaining much poorer than the West.
Sure, but it became an industrial nation nonetheless.
Only by convergence with other industrial economies; this is not an improvement, it's just what is expected even if the institutions do not change.
Iron Bridge wrote:Of course it was a slave economy, in that regard not necessarily better than feudal serfdom, which is why I find your stark claim that Roman Empire is comparable to 18th century Britain in market institutions to be very strange.
The institutions certainly are comparable; the technologies are not. Slavery as-is usually is concentrated primarily within agriculture and only adversely impacts the development of industry if there is no other source for hired manpower than liberated slaves. Since the Roman civilization had hired labourers, differentiated wages and an advanced labour market - all of which coexisted with slavery - I see no reason to exclude Rome from pre-industrial societies with market institutions and private industries. The labour market of Rome was certainly comparable to some of the XVIII century pre-industrial societies which we now consider possible start points for an industrial revolution. Problem is, institutions do not automatically make technology.
That's like saying "serfdom is usually concentrated within agriculture and only adversely affects...". Of course these people are all trapped in working in agriculture, with no capital of their own or freedom to discuss and invent! That's
why serfdom and slavery impede economic development. The Roman Empire
did have a monetary economy and a sophisticated division of labour; it was also the richest large empire seen to that point, and for a long time after. This is comparing to states that had all its same flaws or worse. But is it surprising that Rome didn't grow GDPPC at 1%/year? Not at all! If you put the Roman Empire in today's world it would be close to the bottom of the Economic Freedom Index; the only country in the world today with anything close to Rome's slave plantation economy is North Korea. If you compare it to 1800 Europe, it most resembles Tsarist Russia ("The Third Rome"!), not Britain. Those countries can get convergence growth, if they exist in a world with other industrialised countries. If they're the best on offer, there's nothing to converge with.
Iron Bridge wrote:Latin America did not adopt Western economic policy norms in the 1980s or 1990s. It sat in the middle, between PRC or USSR full socialist institutions, and proper market institutions in US and EU. It also remained middle income.
Why then did Latin America perform worse than the USSR throughout the XX century, despite having a massive head start or being on par, if it had a mixed economy while the USSR had a complete command economy?
This example seems to flat-out contradict the theory - a full command economy is the most remote thing from laissez-faire, while Latin America had a regulated, but market economy. Or is your theory is a bit more complex and a full command economy performs better than something "inbetween", as you sought to describe it?
I said Latin America "in the 80s and 90s", ie. after the Washington Consensus reforms (and, probably more importantly, the fall of most of the left and right wing military governments, with the exception of the one in Cuba) you were talking about, the result of which we're seeing today, not in the early 80s. Latin American institutions from the war to and (in different places to different extents) including much of the 80s were awful: although more in the 'chaos and civil war' sense than an actual consistent system of socio-economic organisation that is bad.
Iron Bridge wrote:New Zealand did not dramatically shift away from Western policy norms.
Latin America's mixed economies weren't exactly a dramatic shift from market institutions which were transplanted by colonial administrations. In fact, the US for quite a while directly administered the conquered Philippines and introduced a carbon copy of their institutions (with a "+ third world corruption" mark), but this did not help the Philippines to become an industrial nation, neither a wealthy industrial one.
* - not that this is necessarily the case; I'm just once again at the use of GDP as an indicator for industrialization. The destruction of India's proto-industry entailed a reduction in GDP and reduction in India's share of industrial manufactures; but it did not, by and large, allow or disallow modern industrialization as it is.
You've got to be very careful what you're comparing here. Latin America inherited "European" institutions from its colonial masters but not "market" institutions. Latin America was controlled by Spain and Portugal which were some of the last European nations to develop; as recently as the 1970s they were dramatically behind the European core. Their institutions back in the late 1700s and early 1800s were nothing like those of Britain or the Netherlands. Argentina was unique in adopting very good market institutions and becoming highly developed rather than just moderately so - that's
why I said it was interesting.
fwiw, the richest country in Latin America is Puerto Rico, a US colony. The richest polities in South America are the Falkland Islands and French Guyana.