- Economic history of Ireland
To 1800
The first settlers in
Ireland were seafarers who survived largely byfishing ,hunting and gathering . This was the extent of the Irish economy for around 3500 years — until 4500BC when farming and pottery making became widespread.Sheep ,goat s,cattle andcereal s were imported from Britain and Europe.Wheat andbarley were the principal crops cultivated. There was an economic collapse around 2500BC, possibly because too much time was being spent building grandiose tombs,Fact|date=November 2007 and the population declined from its peak of around 100,000.Metalworking began in Ireland around 2500BC, with bronze being the principal metal used. Swords, axes, daggers, hatchets, halberds, awls, drinking utensils and horn-shaped trumpets were produced in the period 2500BC – 700BC (theBronze Age ). Mining began also around this time. Mines in Cork and Kerry are believed to have produced as much as 370 tonnes ofcopper during the Bronze Age. TheCelts broughtiron technology to Ireland around 350BC. They established kingdoms and a system of rule, this enabled the economy to be regulated for the first time.In the
12th century Ireland was invaded by theNormans . During these times, the economy was predominantly one based onsubsistence farming , mainlyoats andpotatoes (after thesixteenth century ) and other forms oftillage . The island's main resources were exported to Britain and thus the country's economy went undeveloped. An important industry developed on the south coast involving catching, processing and exportingpilchard s (seeMunster pilchard fishery 1570-1750 ). One major change was the large amount of infrastructural development of Ireland by Britain — roads, railways and canal lines were established.In the
eighteenth century English trade with Ireland was the most important branch of English overseas trade1. The Anglo-Irish absentee landlords drew off some £800,000 p.a. in the early part of the century, rising to £1 million, in an economy that amounted to about £4 million. Completely deforested for timber exports and a temporary iron industry in the course of the seventeenth century, Irish estates turned to the export of salt beef and pork and butter and hard cheese through the slaughterhouse and port city of Cork, which supplied England, theRoyal Navy and the sugar colonies of theWest Indies . Thebishop of Cloyne wondered "how a foreigner could possibly conceive that half the inhabitants are dying of hunger in a country so abundant in foodstuffs?"2. In the 1780s, under pressure from salted meat exported from the Baltic and from theUnited States , the Anglo-Irish landowners rapidly switched to growing grain for export, while the Irish themselves ate potatoes andgroats .19th century
For much of the
1800s , the only factories in Ireland were the textile mills of the north, and theGuinness brewery and theJacob's biscuit factory inDublin . For much of the period the Irish economy existed solely to provide] heapraw materials to the far more industrialised British economy such as timber, beef, vegetables and marble. Ireland underwent major highs and lows economically during the nineteenth century: from economic booms during theNapoleonic Wars and in the late nineteenth century (when it experienced a surge in economic growth unmatched until the 'Celtic Tiger ' boom of the 1990s), to severe economic downturns and a series of famines, the latest threatening in1879 . The worst of these was the Great Famine of1846 -1848 , in which about 750,000 people died and another million were forced to emigrate, with millions more leaving in the following decades.Ireland's economic problems were in part the result of the small size of Irish landholdings. In particular, both the law and social tradition provided for subdivision of land, with all sons inheriting equal shares in a farm, meaning that farms became so small that only one crop, potatoes, could be grown in sufficient amounts to feed a family. Furthermore many estates, from whom the small farmers rented, were poorly run by
absentee landlord s and in many cases heavily mortgaged.When
potato blight hit the island in1845 , much of the rural population was unable to access the remaining food - wheat, livestock etc. which was due to export to Britain. Unfortunately at this time British politicians such as the Prime Minister Robert Peel were wedded to a strict "laissez-faire " economic policy, which argued against state intervention of any sort. While enormous sums were raised by private individuals and charities (Native Americans sent supplies, while Queen Victoria personally donated £5,000) British government inaction (or at least inadequate action) led to a problem becoming a catastrophe; the class of cottiers or farm labourers was virtually wiped out.The famine spawned the first mass wave of Irish emigration to the
United States . There was also a large amount of emigration to England,Scotland ,Canada , andAustralia . This had the long term consequence of creating a large and influentialIrish diaspora , particularly in the United States, who supported and financed different Irish independence movements, beginning with theIrish Republican Brotherhood .History since partition
"Main articles:"
*"
Economic history of the Republic of Ireland "
*"History of Northern Ireland "After the War of Independence, most of Ireland gained independence from the United Kingdom. Twenty-six
counties of Ireland became theIrish Free State , while the other six remained in the Union asNorthern Ireland . There had already been a significant economic divide between these two parts of Ireland, but following partition both regions further diverged, withBelfast , as the North's economic centre, andDublin becoming the capital of the Free State. Partition had a devastating effect on what became Ireland's border area.County Donegal for example was economically separated from its natural regional economic centre ofDerry . The rail network struggled to operate across two economic areas, finally closing across a vast swath of Ireland's border area (the only cross-border route left being that between Belfast and Dublin). In general the economy of the Republic was much weaker than that of the North throughout the twentieth century, with the situation reversing due to the 'Troubles' in Northern Ireland, and the Celtic Tiger era in the Republic spurred on by the high technology industries that took root in the country.Footnotes
#See: Braudel, F, 1979.
#See: Plumb, J.H., 1973.ources
*Braudel, Fernand, "The Perspective of the World," vol III of "Civilization and Capitalism" (1979, in English 1985)
*Plumb, J.H., "England in the 18th Century," 1973: "The Irish Empire"ee also
*
Economy of the Republic of Ireland
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