Widespread Capital Investment in New Cotton Machinery
The necessity for mills to adapt to Indian cotton prompted a competitive rush to invest in new processing machinery. The scale of this capital investment was so substantial that historian Douglas Farnie characterized it as being equivalent to the formation of a new industry.
0
1
Tags
Library Science
Economics
Economy
Social Science
Empirical Science
Science
CORE Econ
Introduction to Microeconomics Course
Ch.8 Supply and demand: Markets with many buyers and sellers - The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Related
Increased Profits and Production for Textile Machinery Firms
Widespread Capital Investment in New Cotton Machinery
Incentives for Technological Innovation
Analysis of Rapid Industrial Innovation
Following a major shift in the global supply chain, textile manufacturers were faced with a new type of raw cotton that their existing equipment could not process efficiently. Within months, machinery producers developed and sold new devices specifically designed to handle this new material. Which of the following statements best analyzes the primary driver for this rapid innovation?
Factors Driving Rapid Industrial Innovation
The introduction of a new type of raw cotton, which existing machinery could not handle, led to a slow, multi-year research and development effort before new processing technology became available.
A sudden change in the availability of a key raw material renders an industry's existing equipment inefficient. Arrange the following events into the most logical chronological and causal sequence, illustrating a market-based response to this technological problem.
A historical event saw a sudden shift in the primary source of a raw material for a major industry. The new material had different properties, making existing machinery inefficient. In response, new machinery was invented and adopted very quickly. Match each economic concept below to the part of the event it best describes.
When a sudden shift in the supply of a raw material made existing industrial equipment inefficient, the potential for significant ____ spurred machinery producers to innovate and develop new, suitable technology within a matter of months.
A sudden geological event makes a nation's primary type of iron ore unavailable. A new, abundant type of ore is discovered, but its different chemical composition requires a more complex smelting process that existing industrial furnaces cannot efficiently perform. Based on the principles of market-driven industrial adaptation, which of the following scenarios is the least likely outcome in the months following this discovery?
Evaluating Policy Responses to Industrial Challenges
Learn After
Assessing the Scale of Industrial Re-Tooling
Historian Douglas Farnie characterized the widespread capital investment in new cotton processing machinery during a specific historical period as being "equivalent to the formation of a new industry." What is the most accurate implication of this characterization?
Strategic Decision-Making in Industrial Adaptation
The widespread investment in new machinery to process a different type of cotton was considered a minor, incremental adjustment for the existing industry.
A historical account describes a situation where an entire industry undergoes a 'competitive rush' to invest in new processing machinery to handle a different type of raw material. The scale of this re-tooling is described as being 'equivalent to the formation of a new industry.' What does this scenario primarily illustrate about the industry's economic environment at that time?
When a historical account describes an industry's widespread capital investment in new machinery as 'equivalent to the formation of a new industry,' what is the most likely underlying reason for such a strong characterization?
A historical account of the cotton industry describes a period where a new type of raw material became available. This led to a 'competitive rush' among mills to purchase and install entirely new processing equipment. The scale of this re-tooling was so vast that it has been described as 'equivalent to the formation of a new industry.' Match each economic concept below to the specific element of the scenario it best describes.
An entire manufacturing industry undergoes a rapid, widespread, and costly re-tooling to process a new type of raw material. This period of intense capital investment is later described by observers as being 'equivalent to the formation of a new industry.' Based on this characterization, what was the most significant long-term economic consequence for the firms within that industry?
Evaluating Industrial Transformation
Analyzing the Impact of Massive Capital Investment
Douglas Farnie's Assessment of the Scale of Capital Investment
The Economics of Industry-Wide Technological Adaptation