Book contents
- Multicultural Origins of the Global Economy
- Multicultural Origins of the Global Economy
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Acknowledgements
- 1 Mapping a New Global Political Economy
- Part I Multicultural Origins of the First (Historical Capitalist) Global Economy, 1500–1850
- Part II What Was Global about the First Global Economy, 1500–c. 1850?
- 7 Countering the Eurocentric Rejection of the First Global Economy (I)
- 8 Countering the Eurocentric Rejection of the First Global Economy (II)
- Part III Empire and the First Global Economy in the Making of Modern Industrial Capitalism, 1500–1800
- Part IV The Second Great Divergence, 1600–1800: Differing ‘Developmental Architectures’ in Global Contexts
- Part V Rehabilitating and Provincialising Western Imperialism: Afro-Asians inside and outside the Shadow of Empire
- Book part
- Bibliography
- Index
7 - Countering the Eurocentric Rejection of the First Global Economy (I)
Unveiling Global Structural Properties
from Part II - What Was Global about the First Global Economy, 1500–c. 1850?
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 17 December 2020
- Multicultural Origins of the Global Economy
- Multicultural Origins of the Global Economy
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Acknowledgements
- 1 Mapping a New Global Political Economy
- Part I Multicultural Origins of the First (Historical Capitalist) Global Economy, 1500–1850
- Part II What Was Global about the First Global Economy, 1500–c. 1850?
- 7 Countering the Eurocentric Rejection of the First Global Economy (I)
- 8 Countering the Eurocentric Rejection of the First Global Economy (II)
- Part III Empire and the First Global Economy in the Making of Modern Industrial Capitalism, 1500–1800
- Part IV The Second Great Divergence, 1600–1800: Differing ‘Developmental Architectures’ in Global Contexts
- Part V Rehabilitating and Provincialising Western Imperialism: Afro-Asians inside and outside the Shadow of Empire
- Book part
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Chapter 7 is the first of two chapters that consider the globality and structural properties of the first global economy (FGE). It challenges the two most comprehensive critiques of the existence of the FGE the neoclassical economic and the transformationalist—(i.e., O'Rourke and Williamson/Held, McGrew, Goldblatt and Perraton respectively). Revealing their Eurocentrism is important because I redeploy their exact threshold criteria within a non-Eurocentric framework in order to prove the existence of the FGE. In particular, I dismantle their imputed Eurocentric temporal binaries in which the pre and post 1828 periods are presented as opposites. That is, transcontinental trade in the pre 1828 era is (re)presented as more controlled/regulated, monopolistic, noncompetitive, luxury-based and non-global than it was so that the post-1828 or post-1945 era can be (re)presented as more laissez-faire, ‘free trading’, competitive and hyper-global than it has been. And I also challenge their ahistorical temporal binary conception wherein the pre-1828 era is (re)presented as more state-regulated and militarily violent than it was while the post-1828 period is (re)presented as more laissez-faire and peaceful than it has been. In the process, their binaries airbrush out of the picture significant continuities between the first and second global economies.
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- Chapter
- Information
- Multicultural Origins of the Global EconomyBeyond the Western-Centric Frontier, pp. 167 - 199Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2020