These connections allowed for an infusion of culture. With this infusion of culture also came an exchange of both products and ideas.
The industrial revolution
Japan's military decreased, and industrial economy increased.
The Industrial Revolution was a rapid change in the economy!
In my view, the principal change in the economy since the 1700s has been the shift from a largely agrarian, rural society to a largely urban, industrial/post-industrial society.
Fulton's steamboat aided people's movement and improved the transport of trade goods, positively impacting the economy. His invention quickened industrial revolution.
Simple progress of the Industrial revolution - eagerly embraced by the North, strongly resisted by the South, secure with their cotton revenues.
peoplr on farms went to work in factories so there were less people that worked on farms.immagrants floaded the streets because of the new buisnesses in the US
The Industrial Revolution proved that the 19th century was the century of the greatest change in the history of man. The appearance of the train powered by a locomotive assured the development of the economy of the Great Plains.Soon, factories were employing hundreds and thousands of workers. The cities expanded and new immigrants settled into the area.
The town was industrialAddition:The industrial revolution was the cause of many benefits, for example the increase in the standard of living, but at the same time it also caused poor working conditions and the exploitation of the average labourer.
While the Western policies of freedom and human rights have helped Japan, much of it's change comes from the people. Western countries have had a more profound effect on Japan's economy.
inflation due to lack of goods and profit motive unemployment due to change in objective and structure of the economy industrial unrest due to labour unrest lack of markets lack of welfare system changes in the international trade pattern
The most far-reaching, influential transformation of human culture since the advent of agriculture eight or ten thousand years ago, was the industrial revolution of eighteenth century Europe.The consequences of industrial revolution would change irrevocably human labor, consumption, family structure, social structure, and even the very soul and thoughts of the individual. This revolution involved more than technology; to be sure, there had been industrial "revolutions" throughout European history and non-European history. In Europe, for instance, the twelfth and thirteenth centuries saw an explosion of technological knowledge and a consequent change in production and labor. However, the industrial revolution was more than technology-impressive as this technology was. What drove the industrial revolution were profound social changes, as Europe moved from a primarily agricultural and rural economy to a capitalist and urban economy, from a household, family-based economy to an industry-based economy. This required rethinking social obligations and the structure of the family; the abandonment of the family economy, for instance, was the most dramatic change to the structure of the family that Europe had ever undergone-and we're still struggling with these changes.