英属美洲殖民地的经济

A. Slater
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引用次数: 0

摘要

识别和分析一个被称为“英属美洲殖民地经济”的统一系统带来了许多挑战。构成英国北美帝国的地区是根据各种因素发展起来的,包括气候和环境,与土著人民的关系,国际竞争和冲突,英国/英国的内部政治,以及定居在每个殖民地的各种群体的社会制度和文化观。然而,尽管英属美洲殖民地的社会经济组织存在很大的多样性,但可以做出一些概括。首先,每个地区最初都将经济活动集中在某种形式的出口导向型生产上,将其与大都市联系在一起。新英格兰专门经营木材、鱼类和航运服务,中部殖民地专营皮毛、谷物和食品,切萨皮克专营烟草,南部专营大米、靛蓝和兽皮,西印度群岛专营糖。第二,每个殖民地出口驱动型经济的成熟最终刺激了内部经济的发展,旨在提供促进出口贸易所需的辅助商品和服务。第三,尽管殖民地内部和不同殖民地之间存在差异,但在17世纪和18世纪期间,英属美洲殖民地的经济扩张速度比欧洲同行要快得多,以至于在美国独立战争前夕,英属美洲的白人定居者享有当时世界上最高的生活水平之一。所有地区的最后一个共同点是,这种强劲的经济增长刺激了对土地和劳动力几乎无法满足的需求。在西印度群岛,当英国人到达时,西班牙人已经在很大程度上灭绝了那里的土著居民。除了西印度群岛之外,随着渴望土地的定居者入侵印第安人的领土并征用他们的土地,边境战争在英属美洲到处都是。劳动力问题虽然也很普遍,但显示出更大的地区差异。新英格兰和中部殖民地通过家庭移民、自然增长和被称为契约仆人的受约束的欧洲工人的输入,在很大程度上满足了他们的劳动力需求。另一方面,切萨皮克、卡罗莱纳和西印度殖民地则发展了“奴隶社会”,大量被俘虏的非洲人后裔被进口,被迫在殖民地种植园充当奴隶劳工。尽管存在这些差异,但应该强调的是,随着美国革命的爆发,奴隶制的制度或多或少地渗透到每一个英属美洲殖民地的经济中。从印第安人手中夺取土地和从被奴役的非洲人手中夺取劳动力,从而塑造了英属美洲所有殖民地的经济史。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Economy of Colonial British America
Identifying and analyzing a unified system called the “economy of colonial British America” presents a number of challenges. The regions that came to constitute Britain’s North American empire developed according to a variety of factors, including climate and environment, relations with Native peoples, international competition and conflict, internal English/British politics, and the social system and cultural outlook of the various groups that settled each colony. Nevertheless, while there was great diversity in the socioeconomic organization across colonial British America, a few generalizations can be made. First, each region initially focused economic activity on some form of export-oriented production that tied it to the metropole. New England specialized in timber, fish, and shipping services, the Middle Colonies in furs, grains, and foodstuffs, the Chesapeake in tobacco, the South in rice, indigo, and hides, and the West Indies in sugar. Second, the maturation of the export-driven economy in each colony eventually spurred the development of an internal economy directed toward providing the ancillary goods and services necessary to promote the export trade. Third, despite variations within and across colonies, colonial British America underwent more rapid economic expansion over the course of the 17th and 18th centuries than did its European counterparts, to the point that, on the eve of the American Revolution, white settlers in British America enjoyed one of the highest living standards in the world at the time. A final commonality that all the regions shared was that this robust economic growth spurred an almost insatiable demand for land and labor. With the exception of the West Indies, where the Spanish had largely exterminated the Native inhabitants by the time the English arrived, frontier warfare was ubiquitous across British America, as land-hungry settlers invaded Indian territory and expropriated their lands. The labor problem, while also ubiquitous, showed much greater regional variation. The New England and the Middle colonies largely supplied their labor needs through a combination of family immigration, natural increase, and the importation of bound European workers known as indentured servants. The Chesapeake, Carolina, and West Indian colonies, on the other hand, developed “slave societies,” where captive peoples of African descent were imported in huge numbers and forced to serve as enslaved laborers on colonial plantations. Despite these differences, it should be emphasized that, by the outbreak of the American Revolution, the institution of slavery had, to a greater or lesser extent, insinuated itself into the economy of every British American colony. The expropriation of land from Indians and labor from enslaved Africans thus shaped the economic history of all the colonies of British America.
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