Agriculture played an important role in the transition to
capitalism in the United States in the mid-nineteenth century. In
her study, Sue Headlee argues that the family farm system, with its
progressive nature and egalitarian class structure, revolutionized
this transition to capitalism. The family farm is examined in light
of its economic and political implications, showing the
relationship between the family farm and fledgling industrial
capitalism, a relationship that fostered the simultaneous
industrial and agricultural revolutions and the creation of an
agro-industrial complex. Headlee focuses on the adoption of the
horse-drawn mechanical reaper (to harvest wheat) by family farmers
in the 1850s. The neoclassical economic explanation, with its
emphasis on the farm as a profit-maximizing firm, is criticized for
its lack of recognition of the role of the family farM's
egalitarian class structure. This look at the economic history of
the United States has lessons for the Third World today:
agricultural development is vital to the transition to capitalism;
the agrarian class structures of Third World countries may be
holding back that transition; and a family farm/land reform
approach would lead to increases in productivity and in the
material well-being of society.
Headlee's analysis supports three important debates in political
economy, thus providing the historical and theoretical context for
understanding the role of agriculture in the transition to
capitalism in general and in the particular case of the United
States. Her findings conclude that agrarian class structures can
explain the differential patterns of development in pre-industrial
Europe. Further evidence is presented that the internal class
structure of agrarian society is the crucial causal factor in the
transition to capitalism and that market developments alone are not
sufficient. Lastly and most controversially, Headlee acknowledges
the importance of the Civil War in propelling the triumph of
American capitalism, allowing the Republican Party (an alliance of
family farmers and industrial capitalists) to take control of the
state from the Democratic Party of the southern plantation owners.
This book will be of interest to scholars in political economy,
economic history, agrarian economics, and development
economics.
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