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25 - Transatlantic Slavery and Economic Development in the Atlantic World: West Africa, 1450–1850

from PART VII - LEGAL STRUCTURES, ECONOMICS, AND THE MOVEMENT OF COERCED PEOPLES IN THE ATLANTIC WORLD

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 September 2011

Joseph E. Inikori
Affiliation:
University of Rochester
David Eltis
Affiliation:
Emory University, Atlanta
Stanley L. Engerman
Affiliation:
University of Rochester, New York
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Summary

The development of markets and the market economy was central to the process of socioeconomic development in the Atlantic world from the fifteenth to the nineteenth century. In the main, the process was propelled by the plantation and mining zones located in the New World. Large-scale specialization in commodity production for Atlantic commerce in these zones created markets, which stimulated a second round of large-scale specialization in the production of goods and services for Atlantic commerce in other regions across the Atlantic. The third round in the causal linkages that produced generalized market development and the geographical spread of the market economy in the Atlantic world occurred within the domestic economies in the region. Wherever specialization in the production of goods and services for export to Atlantic markets occurred, a domestic market was created for producers within the domestic economy, as long as all or the bulk of the specialized export producers' needs were not imported from elsewhere. The process in respect of colonial North America has been described by Shepherd and Walton:

While overseas trade and market activity may not have comprised the major portion of all colonial economic activity, the importance of the market was that of improving resource allocation.…We argue that while subsistence agriculture provided an important base to colonial incomes and was a substantial part of average per capita income, changes in incomes and improvements in welfare came largely through overseas trade and other market activities. Not only did improvements in productivity occur primarily through market activity, but the pattern of settlement and production was determined by market forces. […]

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2011

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References

Alagoa, E. J., “Long-Distance Trade and States in the Niger Delta,” Journal of African History, 11 (1970): 319–29CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Northrup, David, “The Growth of Trade Among the Igbo before 1800,” Journal of African History, 13 (1972): 217–36CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Afigbo, A. E., “Pre-Colonial Trade Links Between Southeastern Nigeria and the Benue Valley,” Journal of African Studies, 4 (1977): 119–39Google Scholar
Latham, A. J. H., “Currency, Credit and Capitalism on the Cross River in the Pre-Colonial Era,” Journal of African History, 12 (1971): 599–605CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shaw, Thurstan, “Archaeological Discoveries: The Example of Igbo-Ukwu,” in Thurston Shaw (ed.), Discovering Nigeria's Past (Ibadan, 1975), pp. 47–57Google Scholar

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