No. Slavery tended to prevent the South from using the new industrialized economies of that period.
They used a slave-plantation system, in which slaves were responsible for labor to produce crops; crops fueled their economies.
they wouldn't be able to purchase goods, seeing as how they wouldn't be paid.
In the XVIIIth century, Europe (mainly the Dutch, England, and France) ruled inetrnational trade through the web of its international trading companies, thanks to the development of its marine, and its colonies. In general, the economy during this time was still agriculturally-based.France and England shared North america, Spain and Portugal central and South America and they developed these conquests and their economies through agriculture (thanks to slavery) and commerce (slave trade, cotton trade, tobaco, coffee, etc...)China was flourishing too with silk and "China" trade but with no army outside its empire and no colonies. During the 18th century, European rulers were very interested in Asian goods, including spices, cotton, silk, and tea; the trade worked only one way however, as Asia wanted no European manufactured goods. Asia became a "gold drain" for Europe Trade between Eastern and Western Europe increased significantly during this time.
Cotton, Slavery, and Oil
Economic reason the farmers in the Constitution avoided the slavery question
No. Slavery tended to prevent the South from using the new industrialized economies of that period.
No. Slavery tended to prevent the South from using the new industrialized economies of that period.
Slavery allowed the South to enter into the new industrialized economies of the nineteenth century.
Europe started to develop economies based slavery in the late 15th century.
Slavery was legal in both the United States and Great Britain in the first years of the nineteenth century. It was also legal in parts of South America.
Slavery
The two greatest domestic issues for the US in the nineteenth century were slavery and the US Civil War. Both issues were connected.
no
Cotton gin
Wow u guys awesome my problem
Slavery
The last three decades of the nineteenth century in the United States were marked by industrialization, urbanization, and westward expansion, but not by the abolition of slavery (as slavery had already been abolished with the end of the Civil War in 1865).