Advantage of Backwardness
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Full Title or Meme
When an advanced civilization is overcome by a more nimble one that is not burdened by the existing political and economic structures.
Context
The American economist and sociologist Thorstein Veblen developed the concept of the Advantage of Backwardness in his essay Imperial Germany and the Industrial Revolution, published in 1915.[1] Veblen did not use the term Advantage of Backwardness himself as is noted below.
In Ancient Times
- Cyprian Broodbank makes the case that the great empires of antiquity ossified and shrank because that could not overcome the limits of one-man rule. The Greek islands on the other hand, benefited from the Advantage of Backwardness and lack of a unifying leader to create a new civilization based on each islands contribution. Later empires learned to create bureaucracies that were able to survive longer, but they too eventually succumbed to other civilizations that used the Advantage of Backwardness in their turn. [2]
In Recent Times
- Also known as; The backward advantage, which implies that a still-developing country can take advantage of their low wages to gain an advantage in manufacturing. This was the position of the Southern States in the United States after the Civil War.[3]
- Thorstein Veblen described Germany's advantage in moving from a feudal society to an industrial society has have a competitive advantage due to skipping the intermediate steps taken by England since Elizabeth I relaxed some strictures that enabled the growth of guilds and other structures that impeded England but were absent in Germany.[4]
As Technology Quickens
- The speed at which technology advances has become so fast that even during a single lifetime generations of technology come and go. In this space it seems that the Advantage of Backwardness has become a curse. Wisdom that comes with age is no longer of value and generations on the web are but a decade long.
References
- ↑ The New York Times, 'The Fly Swatter The New York Times. (2002-07-14) https://www.nytimes.com/2002/07/14/books/l-the-fly-swatter-870072.html
- ↑ Cyprian Broodbank, The Making of the Middle Sea Oxford University Press (2013-11-01) ISBN 978-0199999781
- ↑ Jefferson Cowie, Freedom'a Dominion
- ↑ Thorsetin Veblen Imperial Germany and The Industrial Revolution (1915) https://web.archive.org/web/20170922003505id_/http://socserv.mcmaster.ca/econ/ugcm/3ll3/veblen/ImperialGermany.pdf