Hostname: page-component-7479d7b7d-c9gpj Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-07-12T06:32:26.239Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Firm Size and Economic Backwardness: A New Look at the French Industrialization Debate

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 March 2009

John Vincent Nye
Affiliation:
Assistant Professor of Economics, Washington University, St. Louis, MO 63130.

Abstract

This article challenges the traditional view of French industry—that small, inefficient family firms retarded France's economic growth—by examining data for the French textile and flour milling industries taken from the industry census of 1861–1865. The evidence suggests that the average size of French firms suited the economic and technological conditions of the day. The industries studied exhibit constant returns to scale over a wide output range. France would not seem likely to have gained much from larger firms. This is consistent with revisionist contentions that French industry was as rational as that of other nations.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The Economic History Association 1987

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1 Landes, David, “French Entrepreneurship and Industrial Growth in the Nineteenth Century,” this JOURNAL, 9 (05 1949), pp. 4561Google Scholar and The Unbound Prometheus (Cambridge, 1969);Google Scholar and Kemp, Tom, Economic Forces in French History (London, 1971) take the evidence of French stagnation as a given and seek to explain the development lag.Google ScholarKindleberger, Charles P., Economic Growth in France and Britain, 1851–1950 (Cambridge, Mass., 1961) contains a good summary of the relevant literature that “it might be said that France never went through an industrial revolution.”Google Scholar

2 Gerschenkron, Alexander, “Social Attitudes, Entrepreneurship and Economic Development,” Explorations in Entrepreneurial History, 6 (10 1953), pp. 119Google Scholarand “A Rejoinder,” Explorations in Entrepreneurial History, 6 (May 1954), pp. 287–93:Google ScholarLandes, David, “Social Attitudes, …. A Comment,” Explorations in Entrepreneurial History, 6 (05 1954), pp. 245–72.Google Scholar

3 Clapham, John H., Economic Development of France and Germany (Cambridge, 1968);Google ScholarDynham, Arthur, The Industrial Revolution in France, 1815–1848 (Ann Arbor, 1955);Google ScholarKemp, Tom, “Structural Factors in the Retardation of French Economic Growth,” Kyklos, 15 (1962);CrossRefGoogle ScholarPrice, Roger, The Economic Modernization of France 1730–1880 (London, 1975).Google Scholar

4 These historians, who focused on entrepreneurial failure as the prime cause of retardation, were collectively labeled “The Harvard School.” Their views were most pungently expressed in Explorations in Entrepreneurial History and included Landes, David, Cole, G. D. H., and Sawyer, John. Sawyer's, John “Strains in the Social Structure of Modern France,” in Earle, E. M., ed. Modern France (Princeton, 1951), pp. 293312,Google Scholar is a good representative of this approach and “Attitudes, Entrepreneurship and Economic Development,” Explorations in Entrepreneurial History, 6 (May 1954), pp. 273–86, is a good summation of the case for the entrepreneurial view of economic history.Google Scholar

5 Cameron, Rondo and Freedeman, Charles, “French Economic Growth: A Radical Revision,” Social Science History, 7 (Winter 1983), pp. 330.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

6 Roehl, Richard, “French Industrialization. A Reconsideration,” Explorations in Economic History, 2nd series, 13 (07 1976), pp. 233–81.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

7 O'Brien, Patrick and Keyder, Caglar, Economic Growth in Britain and France 1780–1914 (London, 1978).Google Scholar

8 Ibid., p. 178.

9 Ibid., p. 179.

10 Crafts, N. F. R., “Economic Growth in France and Britain 1830–1910. A Review of the Evidence,” this JOURNAL, 44 (03 1984), pp. 4967.Google ScholarKindleberger, Charles P., “Financial Institutions and Economic Development: A Comparison of Great Britain and France in the Eighteenth Centuries,” Explorations in Economic History, 21 (04 1984), pp. 103–24.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

11 Caron, François, An Economic History of Modern France (New York, 1979), p. 164.Google Scholar

13 Landes, David, “French Entrepreneurship” and “Social Attitudes…. A Comment.” Sawyer, “Strains in the Social Structure of Modern France”Google Scholar and “The Entrepreneur and the Social Order, France and the United States,” in Miller, W., ed. Men in Business (Cambridge, Mass., 1952).Google Scholar

14 Pitts, Jesse, “The Bourgeois Family and French Economic Retardation” (Ph.D. dissertation, Harvard University, 1957).Google Scholar

15 See the discussions in Kindleberger, Economic Growth; Clapham, Economic Development.Google Scholar

16 O'Brien and Keyder, Economic Growth in Britain and France, p. 169.Google Scholar

17 Ibid., p. 171.

18 Ibid., p. 138.

18 Atack, Jeremy, “Returns to Scale in Antebellum United States Manufacturing,” Explorations in Economic History, 14 (10 1977), pp. 337–59;CrossRefGoogle Scholar “Optimal Plant Size and Industrial Structure Before the Modern Industrial Corporation” (unpublished manuscript, University of Illinois, Champaign, 1983); Atack, , Bateman, Fred, and Weiss, Thomas, “The Regional Diffusion and Adoption of the Steam Engine in American Manufacturing,” this JOURNAL, 15 (06 1980), pp.281308;Google ScholarSokoloff, Kenneth, “Was the Transition from the Artisanal Shop to the Nonmechanized Factory Associated with Gains in Efficiency?: Evidence from the U.S. Manufacturing Censuses of 1820 and 1850,” Explorations in Economic History, 21 (10 1984), pp. 351–82.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

20 Braeutigam, Ronald R. and Daughety, Andrew F., “On the Estimation of Returns to Scale Using Variable Cost Functions,” Economic Letters, 11 (1983), pp. 2531.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

21 Christensen, Laurits R., Jorgenson, Dale, and Lau, Lawrence J., “Transcendental Logarithmic Production Frontiers,” Review of Economics and Statistics, 55 (02 1973), pp. 2845;CrossRefGoogle ScholarChristensen, L. R. and Greene, William H., “Economies of Scale in U.S. Electric Power Generation,” Journal of Political Economy, 84 (08 1976), pp. 655–76.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

22 Caves, D., Christensen, L. R., and Swanson, J., “Productivity Growth, Scale Economies, and Capacity Utilization in U.S. Railroads, 1955–1974” (research report, The Transportation Center, Northwestern University, 01 1980).Google Scholar

23 Braeutigam and Daughety, “On the Estimation of Returns to Scale.”Google Scholar

24 Christensen and Greene, “Economies of Scale.”Google Scholar

25 Dansette, Adrian, Naissance de la France moderne (Paris, 1976).Google Scholar

26 Fohlen, Claude, L'indusrrie textile au remps du Second Empire (Paris, 1956).Google Scholar

27 Jenkins, D. T. and Ponting, K. G., The British Wool Textile Industry 1770–1914 (Oxford, 1982), p. 120.Google Scholar

28 Rist, Marcel, “A French Experiment with Free Trade: The Treaty of 1860,” in Cameron, Rondo, ed. Essays in French Economic History (Champaign, 1970), pp. 286314.Google Scholar

29 Lévy-Leboyer, Maurice, “Innovation and Business Strategies in Nineteenth- and Twentieth-Century France,” in Carter, E. C. II, Forster, R., and Moody, J. N., eds., Enterprise and Entrepreneurs in Nineteenth-Century France (Baltimore, 1976), pp. 87135.Google Scholar

30 This problem of weighting is the problem of heteroscedasticity in which differing residuals do not share the same variance, σ2. Various deflating procedures may be tried to correct for this, but the cure may be worse than the problem. I have chosen not to deal with that issue. I simply note that in the presence of heteroscedasticity the estimated regression parameters remain unbiased but the estimated variances are changed. Since the attention in this article centers on the point estimates rather than statistical “tests of significance,” I have chosen not to second-guess the data. Cf. Maddala, G. S., Econometrics, (New York, 1977).Google Scholar

31 Fohlen, L'indusrrie textile au temps du Second Empire.Google Scholar

32 Cobb-Douglas estimates using production instead of cost functions and value added instead of physical output give somewhat larger but statistically insignificant returns to scale at r = 1.11 ± 0.10. There are only 15 observations powered solely by water, so no translog estimates of these could be taken. These show strong decreasing returns at r = 0.70 ± 0.20 using the Cobb-Douglas techniques. While useful as checks, I find the Cobb-Douglas measures inadequate for many of the questions we are interested in.Google Scholar

33 Some consideration was given to the problems associated with the potential sensitivity of the results to the choice of functional forms. In particular, the fact that the translog is a generalization of the Cobb-Douglas form makes one uneasy about its ability to track the behavior of constant- elasticity-of-substitution technologies with elasticities greatly different from One. Using the CES-translog form, first proposed by Pollak, Robert, Sickles, Robin, and Wales, Terence, “The CES-Translog: Specification and Estimation of a New Cost Function,” Review of Economics and Statistics, 66 (11 1984), pp. 602–7 led to estimates of measured returns to scale quite similar to those in this article. Thus the conclusions are at least robust to this respecification. The details appear in my dissertation of the same title as this paper, Northwestern University, 1985.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

34 Alexander Gerschenkron, “Social Attitudes.”Google Scholar

35 Mokyr, Joel A., “Demand vs. Supply in the Industrial Revolution,” this JOURNAL 27 (12 1977), pp. 9811008.Google Scholar