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Download fileBritish textile exports to the southern cone during the first half of the nineteen century: growth, structure and the marketing chain
thesis
posted on 2011-11-30, 09:48 authored by Manuel LlorcaThe historiography of economic relationships between Britain and the Southern Cone
during the first half of the nineteenth century largely ignores trade. Yet, neither
British direct, nor portfolio, investment was important during this period, when the
main gains arose from trade, and directly associated invisible earnings: credits,
shipping freights and insurance. British exports have long been taken for granted to
the extent that there are no specific considerations of textile exports to Latin America.
Between 1815 and 1859, textiles comprised over 80 per cent of British exports to the
Southern Cone. This thesis considers in detail the process by which textiles were
transferred from British manufacturers to local wholesalers. The various relationships
between manufacturers, merchants, ship-brokers, underwriters and mercantile houses
are assessed and analysed. New light is thrown on the relative roles of the
consignment system and own account operations, advances against consignments,
marine insurances, return remittances, commissions and fees, shipping strategies,
packing, and on the use and management of samples and pattern books.
Along with a lack of awareness of how British textiles were exported, little was
known about the actual growth of Britain’s exports to this region. The picture painted
by the historiography, which lacked robust data, was that early exports glutted the
markets. It has been maintained that, thereafter, the small, low-income and scattered
rural population of the Southern Cone had little to offer in exchange. Furthermore, it
has also been put forward that high internal transport costs made this former
backwater of the Spanish Empire nothing but a marginal market. This view considers
the Southern Cone solely ‘responsible’ for the supposedly low volume of British
exports. Post-1860s developments – railways and European migration on a sizeable
scale – are regarded as being responsible for the growth of exports.
This simplistic yet well-rooted approach is challenged. There was nothing exceptional
in the development of the value of British exports to this market. When measured by
volume, textiles exported by Britain to the Southern Cone expanded continuously
throughout the 1820s, 1830s and 1840s and at very high rates, in particular, if per
capita consumption is considered. Apart from the factors considered in the
historiography, an explanation of the Southern Cone’s increasing absorption of British
manufactures from the 1820s requires an examination of other local conditions as
well as the changing situation in Britain, namely: improvements in packing of textiles;
falling costs of productions in Britain; falling ocean freight rates; falling marine
insurances; introduction of free trade in Britain; dramatic improvements in
communications; falling import duties on the spot; better port facilities; struggle of
local craft industries; and the establishment of a more stable political system on the
spot.
Funding
ESRC;PTA-030-2005-00308
History
Supervisor(s)
Cottrell, Philip L.Date of award
2009-03-27Awarding institution
University of LeicesterQualification level
- Doctoral
Qualification name
- PhD