Monday, August 19, 2019
The Pros and Cons of the Industrial Revolution :: American America History
The Pros and Cons of the Industrial Revolution          The Industrial Revolution was a period in history when mankind found  innovative and efficient ways of producing goods, manufacturing services  and creating new methods of transportation. This not only revolutionized  the way the market system functioned, but also changed the way people  perceived their status in society and what they required as basic  necessities. However, the price that humanity was forced to pay for the  emergence of the Industrial Revolution greatly outweighed the rewards that  accompanied it.        Prior to the Industrial Age, the Western European market operated on a  simple "putting-out" system. The average producer was able to manufacture a  product in the same area that he or she lived on and the demand for that  product was usually set by a few local consumers. The process was easy and  simple, provided that the product being created was always required by  someone else. However, the invention of Machinery and all of its  accompanying peripherals allowed producers to start manufacturing on a mass  scale. With factories placed in central locations of the townships (known  as centralization), the previous system was dismantled and categorized into  steps. No longer would one person be required to build, market or transport  their product since the new system introduced the art of specialization.  Specialization allowed a person to perform a single task and guarantee them  wages as a source of income. However, as wonderful as this might seem, this  new system led to the emergence of a n working class (proletariat) and  forced them to depend on market conditions in order to survive as producers.  Although seemingly content at first, those who became employed by these  factories were immediately subjected to deplorable conditions. Arnold  Toynbee made a scholarly assessment of this new wave of socio-economic  behavior and concluded that the working class is suffering due to a series  of hardships that make their lives miserable. He cited low wages, long  hours, unsafe conditions, no provisions for old age, a discipline  determined by machine and whole families being left with a low income rate  as being a recurring problem that exploited the integrity and efficiency of  Industrialization. This subsequently led to a period of "depersonalization"  which meant that the employer-employee relationship was deteriorating in  exchange for this new system. No longer could a worker befriend his boss or  maintain a stable friendship since the divisions between their market  classes made this al most impossible. One relied on the other for  subsistence and therefore this dependency gave the property owners an upper  edge in terms of negotiating income and support.  					    
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