None at all, there is no link between them.
== == * Laissez-faire government is based on the idea that government stays out of economy. During the English industrial revolution, all sorts of factories were beginning to spring up, with absolutely no regulation by the government. These factories led to a new bourgeoisie class, which was not noble by birth, but rich nonetheless by owning factories. The government's unwillingness to interfere with business led to low pay, long hours, and unsafe working conditions for factory workers. It also allowed for child labor and other now outdated practices. The boom-bust cycle is also a major problem that occurs when business is not regulated by government. * Just for clarification, there was no English industrial revolution. However, Britain had an industrial revolution that spread to Europe and then worldwide.
While some believe that they were born together that is not necessarily true. Capitalism came centuries before the industrial revolution however it only came about in small regions such as the UK and the US. It wasn't until the Industrial Revolution that capitalism made it's moves to becoming global (which some countries rejected quickly such as the USSR) and having the markettrulybecome thefundamental aspects of most societies. So the relationship ultimately in myopinion(i sayopinionbecause some would beg to differ) is that capitalism came first in the 15th century then the industrial revolution came in the 19th century and was pretty much capitalism'ssteroidsallowing it to rule the land with a significant enough amount of roid rage to terrify every peasant in it's path but yet make every capitalist gleeful with it's strength.
999-8'/'9Home of the Industrial Revolution, the United Kingdom has produced many great scientists and engineers including Isaac Newton and Charles Darwin. The father of modern economics, Adam Smith, was a Scot. English literature has produced an endless stream of poets, dramatists, essayists and novelists from Geoffrey Chaucer via Shakespeare and his contemporaries to a plethora of modern writers such as J. K. Rowling and the Nobel Prizewinner, Doris LessingUJYHH.
Making cloth was the first type of manufacturing to benefit from the inventions of the 18th Century. During this period of the industrial revolution, England had the advantage of English inventors that sped up textile production and allowed England to be the world's leader. Here are some important inventors in England that impacted the textile industry: A. John Kay invented the Flying shuttle in 1733; B. James Hargreaves invented the Spinning jenny in 1764; C. Richard Arkwright invented the Water frame in 1769; D. Samuel Crompton invented the Spinning mule in 1779; and E. Edward Cartwright invented the Power loom in 1785. These English inventors were key to the English dominance in the textile industry.
For most of English history, the country was little more than self-sufficient. English prosperity really came about in the late 18th and early 19th century where England was on the forefront of modern economic theories. It was due to the early embrace of domestic capitalism, fed by the raw materials of the colonies (especially India and the Caribbean), and the development of industrial manufacture, that accelerated English development. With improved technologies and methods of production, England took its place as the most powerful empire in the world by the end of the 1800s.
He greatly improved the steam engine.
English people invented industrial revolution!
The industrial revolution started in and first affected Britain, particularly the English midlands. Also it affected wales and Ireland.
The construction of the English canal system during the industrial revolution.
english
Thomas Malthus
Abraham lincholn for USA and john mcganley for english
== == * Laissez-faire government is based on the idea that government stays out of economy. During the English industrial revolution, all sorts of factories were beginning to spring up, with absolutely no regulation by the government. These factories led to a new bourgeoisie class, which was not noble by birth, but rich nonetheless by owning factories. The government's unwillingness to interfere with business led to low pay, long hours, and unsafe working conditions for factory workers. It also allowed for child labor and other now outdated practices. The boom-bust cycle is also a major problem that occurs when business is not regulated by government. * Just for clarification, there was no English industrial revolution. However, Britain had an industrial revolution that spread to Europe and then worldwide.
Innovation led to the Industrial Revolution in England through the variety and amount of English thinkers and inventors being able to communicate effectively and quickly about their new farming and factory techniques.
Charles Dickens
Innovation led to the Industrial Revolution in England through the variety and amount of English thinkers and inventors being able to communicate effectively and quickly about their new farming and factory techniques.
Robert J. Werlin has written: 'The English novel and the Industrial Revolution' -- subject(s): English fiction, History, History and criticism, Industrial revolution, Industries in literature, Literature and society, Social classes in literature, Social conflict in literature