by Wildwell » Wed 07 Sep 2005, 08:39:10
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('linlithgowoil', 'T')he more i think about it, the more i feel that modern economies are simply very complex 'things' whose sole funciton is to move objects 'things/people/money/liquids/etc.' from one place to another.
Anyone else think this?
Therefore, without efficient transportation, you have no modern economy.
Yep, and sorts of society has always been based around transport, going right back to Ports and early ships and from early Roman roads and medieval trade routes.
The next boom followed (around 1700-1800 in Britain from canals), the start of the industrial revolution.
After 1825, when the first public steam railway opened in the world between Stockton and Darlington it changed the way we lived. Even in England you had no standard time for example, because horses took days to move between towns and canals were slow.
During 1840-1880 was known as railway mania, which opened up the British Empire, the United States and the world. For the first time large quantities of goods and people could be moved about over long distances. Railway companies bought up everything from canals to hotels, from factories to large tracts of housing.
Suburbia started around 1890, when railways allowed people to commute out of cities. Some of this was down to the invention of electric railways which allowed tramways and lines beneath cities, although the first underground lines were steam. Commuting was born - vast areas of London were build, many European cities and older US cities expanded greatly. In fact London reaches its peak population in the 1950s due to the expansion of ‘metro land’.
Planes and mass production of cars started in the early 2oth century, although there was limited impact because of the 1st and 2nd world wars. And in any case, planes were not competitive with rail until the invention of the jet engine. Up until the 2nd world war the chief transport fuel was coal.
The first Motorways/Freeways were in Germany during the 1930s. But most truck road building around the world has been since the 2nd world war, which allowed much larger trucks and fast access between cities up to a few hundred miles away. A decline is railfreight followed and cars ate into bus and rail passenger numbers away from main lines and in cities.
But travel started in the 1920s/1930s and had replaced trams in many cities by the 1950s, the peak years of bus travel.
Car based suburbs grew up after the Second World war, mainly in the US because of land space limitations, but some towns even in Europe are built for cars.
Globalisation has been driven mainly by aviation, especially since the 1970s. But intercontinental trucking, improvements in shipping and rail freight have also had effects.
Transport allowed modern communications: Satellites, undersea cables and the building of pipelines.
Without transport you can kiss the modern world goodbye, goods and people cannot be move around. Self sufficiency would be the only way, with families living on farms with little medicine, books, and communication.