|
Donald
B.
Wagner,
Background to the Great Leap Forward in Iron and Steel
Click on any image to see it enlarged. Iron
production in two distinct sectors in 18th-century Norway and Sweden
|
| Data on blast-furnace
works in Kopparbergs Län comes from Emanuel
Swedenborg, Regnum subterraneum: sive minerale de ferro,
1734,
pp.
62–63;
Swedish
translation
Mineralriket:
Om
järnet . . ., tr. by H. Sjögren, Stockholm:
Wahlström & Widerstrand, 1923, p. 79. He gives an incomplete
list of 362 blast-furnace works in seven Swedish counties. |
In Norway somewhat later, in 1782, Ole Evenstad calculated the
cost of bloomery iron production at the wage levels which at that time
prevailed in the countryside and concluded:
| Det Kongelige Danske Landhuusholdningsselskabs Skrifter, D.3, København 1790, pp. 446–448. |
One skippund [ca. 160 kg] of excellent refined iron thus costs 4 rix-dollars and 47 skillings. This iron is in every way just as good as the iron produced by the ironworks for 10, 11, or 12 rix-dollars per skippund; in fact the former is much better than some of the latter. When the peasant must pay so much for the iron at the ironworks, and thereafter transport it 20 or 30 miles [1 Norwegian mile = 11.3 km] to his home, how much more advantageous is not the bloomery for him, when he can produce not only for his own needs but also so much that he can sell to others.
Nevertheless he regretfully finds that the Norwegian peasants
no longer produce their own iron, but use their labour in the timber
industry instead. Clearly their comparative advantage has altered, no
doubt because of improved transport and market conditions for timber.
The small blast-furnace works in Guangdong seem to have been
rather larger than the family bloomery works in Norway and Sweden, but
they had the same function: they gave poor peasants employment in the
slack agricultural seasons.
Click on any image to see it enlarged.