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how did england benefit from the colonies

by Prof. Adrien Pacocha Published 2 years ago Updated 2 years ago
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Having colonies helped England in a few main ways:

  • It gave them a safety valve for excess population. Instead of being poor and angry in England, some people could head for the colonies. ...
  • It helped them economically. England could get raw materials from the colonies as well as things like rum that could be better prodcued in the colonies. ...
  • It made them look powerful. ...

These colonies would provide England with valuable materials, like metals, sugar and tobacco, which they could also sell to other countries. The colonies also offered money-making opportunities for wealthy Englishmen and provided England's poor and unemployed with new places to live and new jobs.

Full Answer

How did Britain get so rich from colonisation?

Britain only colonised places it felt it could gain from the areas natural resources. For example, the fur trade in north America. Britain control the area, they control the trade, they benefit in profits. Originally Answered: How did Britain get rich from colonisation?

How did India influence the development of the British Empire?

Raw materials like cotton from India came to Britain and were processed here and turned into clothes which were sold all over the world and many Indians were a One of the main ways was simply through running India, whether you consider the area administered directly through the Raj or the less officially influenced Princely States.

What is an Old English colony?

The various Old English lordships (blue areas on the map) may be regarded as colonies. The earls and their vassals and followers were descended from 12th and early 13th century settlers, they retained links with the parent state, and their lands were at least partly under political control of the mother country.

Would France have gotten rich without colonialism?

And it seems quite possible that colonial nations such as France and the U.K. would have gotten rich without their resource plunder, as did Germany, South Korea, Switzerland and Taiwan. Does that mean colonialism was a benign institution? Definitely not.

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Shareholders and investors

The greatest beneficiaries of colonialism are those businessmen who were were the shareholders or investors of ventures in the colonies. Rewards were typically in the form of profits and dividends.

Colonial administrators

Those involved directly in the Colonial enterprise included various administrators, soldiers, other personnel stationed in these places, and those who served on ships carting products from the colonies to Britain and back again.

Residents of the great port cities and manufacturing towns

Residents and workers of the UK’s great manufacturing towns (such as Manchester) where raw materials from the colonies (such as cotton) were turned into a finished product (like textiles) benefited significantly too.

Other denizens of the UK

Those who were not directly involved in Colonialism also benefited somewhat. This includes people who lived far from these manufacturing towns, and were often relatively impoverished themselves.

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Shareholders and Investors

Colonial Administrators

  • Those involved directly in the Colonial enterprise included various administrators, soldiers, other personnel stationed in these places, and those who served on ships carting products from the colonies to Britain and back again. They had the opportunity to build their careers and benefited in the form of jobs and wages. It was particularly useful for all those second, third and fourth sons …
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Residents of The Great Port Cities and Manufacturing Towns

  • Residents and workers of the UK’s great manufacturing towns(such as Manchester) where raw materials from the colonies (such as cotton) were turned into a finished product (like textiles) benefited significantly too. Benefits came in the form of jobs and wages for those employed directly in the manufacturing industry, or in the form of customers for other people in these town…
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Other Denizens of The UK

  • Those who were not directly involved in Colonialism also benefited somewhat. This includes people who lived far from these manufacturing towns, and were often relatively impoverished themselves. The rationale is as follows: 1. Colonialism fueled the Industrial Revolution in the UK in particular, and the rest of Europe more generally. 2. This saw ec...
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