Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures and tables
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Economic Aspects of Spanish Imperial Expansion, 1492–1550
- 3 Commodities and Resources During the Conquest Period
- 4 The Hapsburg Commercial System
- 5 Inter-Colonial Trade and the Hapsburg Commercial System
- 6 Foreign Penetration of the Ibero-American Economy in the Hapsburg Period
- 7 Economic Growth in Spanish America in the Hapsburg Period
- 8 Commercial and Economic Relations in the Early Bourbon Period, 1700–1765
- 9 ‘Free Trade’ and the Peninsular Economy
- 10 ‘Free Trade’ and the American Economy
- 11 Economic Relations Between Spain and America on the Eve of the Revolutions for Independence
- 12 Conclusion: Economic Grievances and Insurrection in Late Colonial Spanish America
- Appendix: Spanish Monarchs
- Glossary of Spanish Terms
- Bibliographical Essay
- Index
7 - Economic Growth in Spanish America in the Hapsburg Period
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures and tables
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Economic Aspects of Spanish Imperial Expansion, 1492–1550
- 3 Commodities and Resources During the Conquest Period
- 4 The Hapsburg Commercial System
- 5 Inter-Colonial Trade and the Hapsburg Commercial System
- 6 Foreign Penetration of the Ibero-American Economy in the Hapsburg Period
- 7 Economic Growth in Spanish America in the Hapsburg Period
- 8 Commercial and Economic Relations in the Early Bourbon Period, 1700–1765
- 9 ‘Free Trade’ and the Peninsular Economy
- 10 ‘Free Trade’ and the American Economy
- 11 Economic Relations Between Spain and America on the Eve of the Revolutions for Independence
- 12 Conclusion: Economic Grievances and Insurrection in Late Colonial Spanish America
- Appendix: Spanish Monarchs
- Glossary of Spanish Terms
- Bibliographical Essay
- Index
Summary
ECONOMIC INTERDEPENDENCE
As we have seen in the discussion in Chapter 5 of the relationship between inter-colonial trade and the Carrera de las Indias, and in Chapter 6 of the economic significance (in terms of both the generation of contraband and increased local defence expenditure) of foreign commercial and territorial penetration of America in the seventeenth century, any attempt to isolate internal and regional economic activity in colonial Spanish America from either trans- Atlantic trade with Spain or illegal international commerce with other nations is difficult and in some respects artificial. Similarly, because of the complex social and economic inter-relationships which existed between entrepreneurs involved in mining, agriculture, industry and trade—prominent merchants, for example, tended to have important interests in land, and, not infrequently, in parts of Mexico and Peru in mining—separate analysis of these sectors can also provide a distorted, somewhat artificial reflection of actual social mechanisms, and of the fluid interactions that occurred between and within elite socio-economic groups. Despite these caveats, it is still legitimate for the historian to recognise, or at least seek to identify, the existence of an internal, American economy, which, while overlapping with the trans-Atlantic structure, also enjoyed a considerable degree of autonomy, especially from the middle of the seventeenth century, when the dependence of Americans upon the economic mechanisms of metropolitan Spain began to be eroded by economic decline in the peninsula and economic growth in America.
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- Publisher: Liverpool University PressPrint publication year: 1997