5.7 Economic Developments and Innovations in the Industrial Age Flashcards
AP • AP World History: Modern • Unit 5: Revolutions • 5.7 Economic Developments and Innovations in the Industrial Age
Use these 30 flashcards to lock in how industrial-era economies transformed production, labor, finance, and global exchange. You will practice recall, comparison, and AP-style reasoning while checking common misconceptions about capitalism, workers, and whether economic growth benefited all groups equally.
What you'll master
- How industrial capitalism reshaped production, trade, and class structure.
- Why corporations, banks, and stock markets expanded in this period.
- How labor systems shifted from household production to wage work.
- Comparisons between capitalist, socialist, and labor-reform responses.
- How migration and commodity flows linked regional economies globally.
- AP writing moves for causation, continuity/change, and comparison.
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Topic Intro
Topic 5.7 tracks how industrialization transformed economic organization between 1750 and 1900. Production shifted from dispersed household systems to factory-centered industrial capitalism, where investors, managers, and wage laborers occupied distinct roles. Expanding joint-stock corporations and modern banking systems mobilized capital at unprecedented scale, supporting railroads, heavy industry, and global trade. At the same time, workers experienced unstable wages, long hours, and unsafe conditions, producing new labor politics and collective action. Industrial economies also deepened integration through migration, commodity circulation, and financial linkages, creating global commodity chains that tied raw-material zones to manufacturing centers. Economic growth accelerated, but outcomes were uneven across class, region, and empire. Debates over free-market liberalism, socialism, and reform reflected conflict about who should control production and how wealth should be distributed. Periodic shocks revealed business cycles and vulnerability to market volatility. For AP analysis, avoid treating growth as automatically beneficial. Show how institutions, class relations, and political choices shaped both innovation and inequality in the industrial age.
Why it matters
This topic explains the economic roots of modern inequality, labor politics, and global market integration, all central themes in modern world history.
Exam move
For AP essays, link one economic innovation to one social consequence, then compare that pattern across two regions or class groups.
FAQs
What economic changes define the industrial age in Topic 5.7?
Major shifts include factory production, wage labor expansion, corporate growth, new finance systems, and deeper global market integration.
Why did corporations and stock markets become more important?
Large-scale industry required pooled capital and risk-sharing structures, which corporations and stock exchanges made more feasible.
Did industrial economic growth immediately improve living standards for all?
No. Growth raised output, but many workers initially faced exploitation, insecurity, and poor urban conditions before broader reform.
How did migration connect to industrial economic development?
Migration supplied labor to industrial centers and linked regions through remittances, consumer demand, and labor-market adjustment.
What is a strong AP exam strategy for Topic 5.7?
Build a causal-comparative thesis on one economic innovation, support it with specific evidence, and explain uneven social outcomes.