In Carriers of Growth? Ann Coenen sheds new light on the vigorous debate about international trade and economic development in the Early Modern Period. The Austrian Netherlands offer an intriguing case that challenges ruling opinions within the largely Anglo-Saxon literature.
By focusing on a number of key trade sectors (salt, textiles, colonial commodities, coal and grain) Ann Coenen exposes the various effects of trade and trade policy throughout all layers of the eighteenth-century society.
Ann Coenen, Ph.D. (2013, University of Antwerp), is a lecturer at Utrecht University. Her previous and ongoing research focuses on trade, growth and the development of markets.
Preface ... ix
List of Map, Charts and Tables ... xi
List of Abbreviations ... xv
Glossary ... xvi
Introduction ... 1
Part 1 Theoretical Background
1 International Trade and Economic Development ... 11
2 The Austrian Netherlands in the Second Half of the Eighteenth Century: A Cautious Recovery ... 17
3 International Trade by a Commercially âPassiveâ Participant ... 22
Part 2 International Trade in the Austrian Netherlands: An Assessment of Its Value
5 The Balance of Trade ... 41
1 State of the Art ... 42
2 Approach ... 44
3 Results ... 46
4 What Did It Mean? ... 57
5 The Pitfalls of the Balance of Trade ... 60
6 Revealed Comparative Advantages Through International Trade Contributions ... 61
7 Conclusion ... 65
Part 3 International Trade in the Austrian Netherlands, a Study of Five Key Sectors
6 The Salt Trade: The Flavour of Progress ... 69
1 âThe salt of lifeâ ... 69
2 The Salt Sector in the Austrian Netherlands ... 70
3 The Salt Flows ... 82
4 Contradicting Histories? ... 90
5 Conclusion ... 93
7 The Textile Trade: A Tradition in Decay? ... 95
1 The Eighteenth-Century Textile Sector ... 95
2 The Economic Weight of the Textile Branches ... 97
3 A Textile Landscape in Evolution ... 106
4 Explaining the Shifts Within the Textile Sector ... 153
5 The Impact of Trade on Different Stakeholders ... 163
6 Conclusion ... 169
8 The Trade in Colonial Commodities: Introducing the Exotic ... 173
1 The Irresistible Lure of Exotic Produce ... 175
2 Incorporating the New ... 185
3 Market Capacity or Smart Policy? ...195
4 Conclusion ... 198
10 To Trade or Not to Trade? The Grain Trade ... 232
1 Grains in the Eighteenth-Century Austrian Netherlands ... 234
2 Changing Policies: Fickleness or Decisiveness? ... 236
3 The International Grain Trade: Capricious Flows ... 245
4 Conclusion ... 251
Part 4 The Development of Transit Trade as theTrade Policyâs Litmus Test
11 Transit Trade ... 255
Conclusion ... 271
Appendices ... 277
Bibliography ... 298
Index ... 316
All interested in the large debates on economic development in history, and the immense changes that Early Modern Europe experienced.