Friday, September 26, 2014

Why are we so Rich?

Our wealth is nothing short of The Greatest Story Ever Told (<---greatest lecture ever told). We take for granted the wealth that our great-grandparents considered unimaginable luxury. But where did the wealth come from? How? Why? 

It is easy to say "technology," but the Greeks had an amazing grasp on mathematics, technology and material production. In fact:

"Hero also invented a device called an aeolipile...the aeolipile was, before anyone knew what to do with such a thing, a steam engine." 

You read that right, the Greeks invented a steam engine  (38:00), and that’s just the start. The discovery of the antikathera mechanism, a mechanical calendar, demonstrated that the Greeks not only had an intense theoretical understanding of mathmatics, but the ability to create a device that "shows a technological sophistication that was not seen again until clockwork mechanisms were introduced in the 14th century." 

If the Greeks could produce machines that were approximately 1,500 years more advanced than historians previously thought possible, why didn’t they invent cars, steam ships, or rockets to the moon? Why didn’t they have an Industrial Revolution? 

The answer is that "Alexandria wasn’t just a city of scientists and philosophers. It was a city of engineers" and while engineers, scientists, and philosophers might be able to produce amazing things, technology does not instantly convert itself into wealth for the ordinary person. 

So, if it wasn’t technology, why are we so rich? 

Historically, the Chinese had the ability to produce far more than all of Europe. 

Even as late as the 1800's the Chinese had such superior production capabilities that they "saw themselves as the Middle Kingdom and all other peoples as inferior barbarians." In fact, when the British Empire first made contact with the Chinese, "Any goods brought as gifts [mechanical clocks, cannons, etc] to the Chinese court were interpreted as tribute."

So, it’s obvious that the Chinese could produce goods at an unparalleled rate for most of human history, but this production did not lead to either an industrial revolution or the levels of wealth we see today. 

If output and production do not create wealth, why are we so rich? 

Similarly fantastic stories could be told about the Romans, the Arabs, and Native Americans, among many others. Amazing technology, Mathematics, and production are nothing new in human history, but none of it explains the Industrial Revolution. 

Wealth was created by accident.

The English monarchs often battled their barons for control and power. To a modern audience, it could seem a little like a TV drama:

"The existence of urban centers…was first and foremost the product of political weakness and the fact that kings found it useful to protect the independence of cities as a means of undercutting the great territorial lords who were their rivals...Thus sheltered, the cities evolved as independent communes that, through growing trade, developed their own resources independent of the manorial economy." -Francis Fukuyama, The Origins of Political Order

That’s right; wealth was allowed to grow because political power was too weak to stop it. Monarchs offered peasants freedom and rights in order to reduce the power that competing aristocrats could wield. The king didn’t know that freedom would create wealth, much less the Industrial Revolution, but this political decision was the first step in the process that would only become evident hundreds of years later when Adam Smith wrote The Wealth of Nations.

However, many societies have had weak governments, but few ended up creating wealth. So, why are we so rich?

Deirdre Mcclosky argues that Western Europeans were one of the first cultures that finally saw "profit" as a respectable endeavor. In Greek, Roman, and Christian times, profits were seen as illegitimate and merchants were often demonized. 

"A Swiss traveler wrote about the same time that “in England commerce is not looked down upon as being derogatory, as it is in France and Germany. Here men of good family and even of rank may become merchants without losing caste.” He meant it literally: in France and Spain a nobleman caught engaging in commerce could be stripped of his rank."

“In Thebes,” wrote Aristotle with evident approval, “there used to be a law that one who had not abstained from the market for ten years could not share in office.”

Just about every society in history has diverted its resources to warriors, priests, rulers or philosophers. These occupations received a striking amount of attention because they were highly respected "And so the best minds went into war or politics or religion or bureaucracy or poetry. Some still do."  It wasn’t until people had both freedom and respect for merchants that society had the motivation, and ability, to seek profits and reinvest capital.

Why are we so rich?

"The Tide Came from a New Dignity and a New Liberty for the Ordinary Bourgeoisie and Its Innovations"