
This paper proposes an institutional theory of industrial takeoff: sudden expropriation of conservative institutional landholdings creates the mobile capital necessary for industrialization. The dissolution of England’s monasteries (1536-1541) transferred approximately 25-30% of cultivated land from ecclesiastical to secular hands within a single generation, creating conditions for industrial acceleration two centuries later. France’s revolutionary confiscations (1789-1815) produced analogous structural effects preceding nineteenth-century industrialization. China’s delayed industrialization, despite centuries of technological sophistication, supports the theory negatively: absent comprehensive land redistribution until the twentieth century, industrial takeoff did not occur. This framework complements existing explanations by identifying institutional land ownership as a necessary (though not sufficient) precondition for sustained industrial growth. The analysis integrates insights from institutional economics, economic history, and development studies to advance understanding of why some societies industrialize while others with comparable resources and knowledge do not.
History, Industrial revolution, Dissolution
History, Industrial revolution, Dissolution
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