This text is part of the Internet Modern History
Sourcebook.
---The Core
The core regions benefited the most from the
capitalist world economy. For the period under discussion, much of north-western
Europe (England, France, Holland) developed as the first core region.
Politically, the states within this part of Europe developed strong central
governments, extensive bureaucracies, and large mercenary armies. This
permitted the local bourgeoisie to obtain control over international commerce
and extract capital surpluses from this trade for their own benefit. As the
rural population expanded, the small but increasing number of landless wage
earners provided labor for farms and manufacturing activities. The switch from
feudal obligations to money rents in the aftermath of the feudal crisis
encouraged the rise of independent or yeoman farmers but squeezed out many
other peasants off the land. These impoverished peasants often moved to the
cities, providing cheap labor essential for the growth in urban manufacturing.
Agricultural productivity increased with the growing predominance of the
commercially-oriented independent farmer, the rise of pastoralism, and improved
farm technology.
---The Periphery
On the other end of the scale lay the peripheral
zones. These areas lacked strong central governments or were controlled by
other states, exported raw materials to the core, and relied on coercive labor
practices. The core expropriated much of the capital surplus generated by the
periphery through unequal trade relations. Two areas, Eastern Europe
(especially Poland) and Latin America, exhibited characteristics of peripheral
regions. In Poland, kings lost power to the nobility as the region became a prime
exporter of wheat to the rest of Europe. To gain sufficient cheap and easily
controlled labor, landlords forced rural workers into a "second
serfdom" on their commercial estates. In Latin America, the Spanish and
Portuguese conquests destroyed indigenous authority structures and replaced
them with weak bureaucracies under the control of these European states.
Powerful local landlords of Hispanic origin became aristocratic capitalist
farmers. Enslavement of the native populations, the importation of African
slaves, and the coercive labor practices such as the encomienda and
forced mine labor made possible the export of cheap raw materials to Europe.
Labor systems in both peripheral areas differed from earlier forms in medieval
Europe in that they were established to produce goods for a capitalist world
economy and not merely for internal consumption. Furthermore, the aristocracy
both in Eastern Europe and Latin America grew wealthy from their relationship
with the world economy and could draw on the strength of a central core region
to maintain control.
---The Semi-Periphery
Between the two extremes lie the
semi-peripheries. These areas represented either core regions in decline or
peripheries attempting to improve their relative position in the world economic
system. They often also served as buffers between the core and the peripheries.
As such, semi-peripheries exhibited tensions between the central government and
a strong local landed class. Good examples of declining cores that became
semi-peripheries during the period under study are Portugal and Spain. Other
semi-peripheries at this time were Italy, southern Germany, and southern
France. Economically, these regions retained limited but declining access to
international banking and the production of high-cost high-quality manufactured
goods. Unlike the core, however, they failed to predominate in international
trade and thus did not benefit to the same extent as the core. With a weak
capitalist rural economy, landlords in semi-peripheries resorted to sharecropping.
This lessened the risk of crop failure for landowners, and made it possible at
the same time to enjoy profits from the land as well as the prestige that went
with landownership.
According to Wallerstein, the semi-peripheries
were exploited by the core but, as in the case of the American empires of Spain
and Portugal, often were exploiters of peripheries themselves. Spain, for
example, imported silver and gold from its American colonies, obtained largely
through coercive labor practices, but most of this specie went to paying for
manufactured goods from core countries such as England and France rather than
encouraging the formation of a domestic manufacturing sector.
---External Areas
These areas maintained their
own economic systems and, for the most part, managed to remain outside the
modern world economy. Russia fits this case well. Unlike Poland, Russia's wheat
served primarily to supply its internal market. It traded with Asia as well as
Europe; internal commerce remained more important than trade with outside
regions. Also, the considerable power of the Russian state helped regulate the
economy and limited foreign commercial influence.