Working paper
New answers to old questions: transport costs and the slow adoption of ring spinning in Lancashire
- Abstract:
- It has been argued that the additional cost of transporting ring yarn in the vertically and geographically specialised Lancashire cotton industry was sufficiently high to deter spinners from adopting rings. The absence of a transition to large scale vertically integrated plants is seen as a form of entrepreneurial failure. In this paper we use new evidence to show that the majority of yarn could have been woven within the district in which it was spun, and, further, that in such areas, the average distance between spinners and weavers was a matter of yards. Transport costs were no more important for these firms than for vertically integrated ones. This yields a testable hypothesis: vertically specialised firms located in these areas should have been as ready to adopt rings as were integrated firms. We test this proposition and find it to be correct: co-located independent, vertically specialised firms were as likely to adopt rings as were vertically integrated firms. As such the industry's failure to move to large scale vertically integrated production cannot be characterised as a form of entrepreneurial failure.
- Publication status:
- Published
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- Publication website:
- https://www.economics.ox.ac.uk/publication/1169366/manual
Authors
- Publisher:
- University of Oxford
- Article number:
- 22
- Series:
- Oxford Economic and Social History Working Papers
- Place of publication:
- Oxford
- Publication date:
- 1998-02-01
- Paper number:
- 22
- Language:
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English
- Pubs id:
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1169366
- Local pid:
-
pubs:1169366
- Deposit date:
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2021-03-26
- ARK identifier:
Terms of use
- Copyright holder:
- Tim Leunig
- Copyright date:
- 1998
- Rights statement:
- © 1998 the Author(s).
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