Commerce; Economics; Market Competition - AP European History

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Question

The Wealth of Nations was written by __________.

Answer

Adam Smith is one of the most influential economists in European history. His magnum opus The Wealth of Nations was published in 1776 and is one of the earliest-known works advocating for free-market laissez-faire capitalism. It also touches on issues like division of labor, class structure, and government intervention in the economy.

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Question

Which of these best describes why Britain began prioritizing the sale of opium to China in the mid-nineteenth century?

Answer

In the early nineteenth century, Britain found itself in the unique position, at the time, of importing more from China than it was exporting. An unfavorable balance of trade, from the British perspective, was emerging and worsening over time. In an attempt to remedy this, the British decided to begin prioritizing the sale of opium to China in the knowledge that it was highly addictive and would result in extensive and consistent profits for the British, which would help balance the trading relationships between the two countries in Britain’s favor.

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Question

What was the significance of the Zollverein?

Answer

The Zollverein is the name given to a movement to unify the economies of several German states in the nineteenth century several decades prior to German political unification. It was an organization set up to manage tariffs and control economic policy between the various German states. The Austrian Empire was notably not included. It is the earliest-known European example of an economic union that was not accompanied or preceded by a political union.

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Question

The late-eighteenth-century idea that an overgrowth in population would inevitably lead to famine and disease is known as __________.

Answer

Thomas Robert Malthus was an English cleric and economist who wrote An Essay on the Principle of Population in 1798, initially under a pseudonym. Malthus argued in his essay that the increasing population of Great Britain would be unable to feed itself with its current agricultural output and would face famine and disease, a condition known as "the Malthusian catastrophe." Malthus' predictions did not come to pass largely because of the technological advances of the Industrial Revolution and the Agricultural Revolution.

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Question

The Iron Law of Wages states that __________.

Answer

The Iron Law of Wages is an important principle of capitalist economics usually credited to David Ricardo, although sometimes it is credited to Thomas Malthus. It states that in the long term, the amount of money that a worker receives for labor will always tend towards the bare minimum needed to keep the worker alive and working.

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Question

Britain embraced free market trade when __________.

Answer

Britain, like most other countries at the time, embraced mercantalism in the initial period of European colonialism and expansion; however, the British switched their economic policy to the promotion of free market capitalism once their naval power and commercial might made doing so advantageous. This has been widely criticized by politicians and thinkers in other countries who decry Britain’s emphasis on “fairness” and “economic equality” when, from their perspective, the British only embraced it themselves after they had become wealthy from the exploitation of other countries' raw resources and peoples.

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Question

The banking revolution emerged first in __________.

Answer

Banking, as we generally understand it, can be loosely traced to the Italian city-states at the height of the Italian Renaissance; however, it did not really emerge as an institution that could extend credit and support corporations until the banking revolution that began in the Dutch Republic in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries and quickly spread to Britain and then around Western Europe.

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Question

Thomas Malthus’ Essay on the Principle of Population suggests that __________.

Answer

Thomas Malthus wrote his famous work An Essay on the Principle of Population in 1798, and it quickly came to have a profound effect on the government policies of Western European countries and the development of several ideas, such as the theory of natural selection. It states that population will naturally increase at a greater rate than the ability of that population to sustain itself—essentially, that unchecked population growth will lead to poverty and a lower standard of living. Malthus based his theory, in part, on his belief that human reproduction operates on an exponential model whereas production operates on an arithmetic model. The British government in particular during the Industrial Revolution took Malthusian theories to heart and attempted to limit the growth of the working class.

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Question

Mercantalism is best described as an economic system where __________.

Answer

Mercantalism was the primary economic policy of most European nations during the age of European colonialism and exploration and lasted until the innovations of the Industrial Revolution. Mercantalism is a system of government designed to promote a favorable balance of trade in the home country by exploiting colonies. The government regulates the economic interests of the country by engaging in protectionism.

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Question

Who benefitted the least from the inflationary economy of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries?

Answer

The middle class were certainly the primary beneficiaries of the inflationary economy of this time period. The situation for the rural peasants and the clergy remained largely unchanged, while a small number of the urban working class might have been elevated to the middle class. However, for the nobility, the inflationary economy was a huge hindrance, particularly if the wealth of the noble family was based exclusively on land ownership.

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Question

"By preferring the support of domestic to that of foreign industry, he intends only his own security; and by directing that industry in such a manner as its produce may be of the greatest value, he intends only his own gain, and he is in this, as in many other cases, led by an invisible hand to promote an end which was no part of his intention. Nor is it always the worse for the society that it was no part of it. By pursuing his own interest he frequently promotes that of the society more effectually than when he really intends to promote it. I have never known much good done by those who affected to trade for the public good. It is an affectation, indeed, not very common among merchants, and very few words need be employed in dissuading them from it."

In the preceding excerpt adapted from Adam Smith's The Wealth of Nations (1776), Smith presents which of the following arguments?

Answer

In perhaps the most famous passage from Adam Smith's magnum opus, The Wealth of Nations, Smith lays out his belief that the incentives faced by those engaging in free and competitive business result in often pure self-interest being made to work for wider public interests. Smith wrote at a time when it was common for absolutist monarchs to manage large empires with millions of inhabitants for their own interests all the while cloaking their actions in the language of serving the greater good of the nation. Smith was influential in launching the free trade movement, which argued that society would prosper much more if businesspeople were allowed to trade freely rather than having monarchs directing economic affairs for their own personal gain.

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Question

The Medici family gained political control over the city of Florence in the later Middle Ages through __________.

Answer

In 1394, Giovanni de Medici founded the Medici Bank in Florence, which over the next century became the most powerful and influential bank in all of Europe. Through this influence, the Medici family slowly gained political power over the city of Florence, which was asserting itself as the most powerful Italian city-state. The Medici family would become hereditary Dukes of Florence, produce four popes, and have two women become queen regents of France.

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Question

European commerce was primarily concentrated in __________ during the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries.

Answer

Around 1450, European commerce was primarily concentrated in the Italian city-states. Cities like Florence, Milan, Naples, Venice, and Rome all profited from their position on the Mediterranean that allowed them to facilitate trade between the Near East and the rest of Europe. Eventually the center of commerce would migrate to the Iberian Peninsula before quickly shifting north to the Netherlands and England.

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Question

Which of the following is true of the Triangular Trade Route?

I) It allowed Europeans to sell manufactured goods to the Americas and Africa.

II) It involved the forced transfer of slaves from Africa to the Americas.

III) It introduced alcohol to many people for the first time.

IV) It flooded the European market with new raw resources.

Answer

The Triangular Trade Route is the name used to describe the transfer of products, resources, and humans from one continent to another during the colonial era. Generally, it involved the forced transfer of slaves from Africa to the Americas; the transportation of raw resources from the Americas to Europe; and the opening up of Africa and the Americas as a market for manufactured goods from Europe. It also introduced alcohol to millions of indigenous people for the first time, which would have profound sociological effects for centuries to come.

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Question

Rampant inflation in Europe in the sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries was caused by __________.

Answer

Inflation generally occurs when there is too much money flooded into a society without a proportional increase in the level of production. In sixteenth-century Europe, almost all currency was backed by gold, silver, or some other precious metal, so when gold and silver flooded into Europe from the New World, it led to rampant inflation until the money could be reinvested into increasing the level of production.

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Question

The notion that the economy is governed by its own set of natural laws, like supply and demand, was made famous in __________.

Answer

Adam Smith’s Wealth of Nations introduced many of the thinkers and rulers of Europe to the idea that the economy is governed by a set of natural laws that would naturally inspire efficiency and competition. Furthermore, Smith contends that government intervention only impedes this process. The idea that the economy is subject to natural laws underpins much of the theory behind free market capitalism.

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Question

A "bourse" refers to __________.

Answer

A "bourse" was the name commonly given to a stock exchange in the French speaking world, particularly in the Early Modern period.

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Question

__________, in the nineteenth century, dramatically lowered the cost of shipping and expanded what kinds of goods could be effectively transported and sold.

Answer

The invention of the steam engine by Thomas Newcomen, and its later improvement by James Watt, led to and accelerated the industrial revolution. It also led to the construction of railroads in the first half of the nineteenth century, particularly in Britain. This lowered the cost and time required for shipping and allowed new types of goods to be effectively transported and sold.

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Question

The __________ were a prominent family of German bankers and investors in the sixteenth century.

Answer

By the sixteenth century, the center of European commerce was rapidly migrating north, and for a time the Fugger family in Germany controlled more wealth than all of the Italian merchant families combined. This was a time of great economic innovation in Germany and the Netherlands, and the Fuggers may be understood as an early incarnation of venture capitalists.

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Question

According to mercantilism, a nation’s wealth may be measured by __________.

Answer

According to the economic theory of mercantilism, a nation’s wealth is measured by how much precious metal (gold and silver) it has accumulated and stored. The entire purpose of maintaining a favorable balance of trade was to ensure that more gold and silver was coming into the country than was leaving.

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