What can two periods of industrialisation nearly two centuries apart tell us about how economies change and the demands their change place on the planet?
Today, China leads the wave of emerging economies poised to recast the Western-dominated geopolitical balance. Its development over the past three decades has turned it from a rural backwater ā the āSick Man of the Orientā ā into the worldās second largest economy. According to the Peterson Instituteās Arvind Subramanian, China will soon displace the US as the dominant economic power in the world, wielding a global influence even greater than that of the British Empire at its height.
But Chinaās economic ascendancy has been purchased at a high environmental cost. Degraded ecosystems, polluted waterways, and encroaching deserts ā these are the malignant byproducts of the largest economic expansion in history. The British historian Niall Ferguson has said that China seems intent on ācramming a centuryās worth of industrialisation and urbanisation into about 30 yearsā. This sounds dramatic, but Professor Fergusonās assessment may be an understatement. According to a recent report by the McKinsey Global Institute, Chinaās industrialisation has proceeded at ten-times the speed and 100-times the scale of Britainās.
Nonetheless, Britain still provides the archetypal example of the industrialisation experience, if only because it was the first. The world was fundamentally changed when James Watt, along with fellow inventors and entrepreneurs such as James Hargreaves and Richard Arkwright, pioneered the technologies that catalysed the great burst of productivity we now call the Industrial Revolution. By 1829, the Victorian social critic Thomas Carlyle had already proclaimed the dawn of the āAge of Machineryā.