More on Imperialism
Effects
Almost without exception, the economics of
imperialism can be described as "plunder economies". This entailed
three tendencies. First, colonial regimes expropriated the land from
the people who lived there. This was accomplished through force, backed
by pseudo-legal means: unless a given person, or group, had a legal
title in the western sense to the land they lived on, they were liable
to have it seized. Likewise, traditional rights to hunt, gather
material, and migrate with herds were lost. Second, colonial regimes
expropriated raw materials like rubber, generally shipped back to Europe
to be turned into finished products. Third, colonial regimes exploited
native labor. This was sometimes in the form of outright slavery like
the Congo, the Portuguese African colonies, and forced labor in French
and German colonies. In other cases, it consisted of "semi-slavery" as
on the island of Java where the Dutch imposed quotas of coffee and
spices on villages. In other areas, like most of the territories
controlled by Britain, it was in the form of subsistence-level wages
paid to workers.
In addition to the forms of labor exploitation,
European powers imposed "borders" where none had existed, both splitting
up existing kingdoms, tribes, and cultures and lumping different ones
together arbitrarily. Sometimes European powers favored certain local
groups over others in order to better maintain control, such as the
British policy of using the Tutsi tribe ("tribe" in this case being
something of a misnomer – "class" is more accurate) to govern what would
later become Rwanda over the majority Hutus. Thus, the effects of
imperialism lasted long after former colonies achieved their
independence in the twentieth century, since almost all of them were
left with the borders originally created by the imperialists, often
along with starker ethnic divisions than would have existed otherwise.
In
a somewhat ironic twist, only certain specific forms and areas of
exploitation ever turned a profit for Europeans, especially for European
governments. Numerous private merchant companies founded to exploit
colonial areas went bankrupt. The entire French colonial edifice never
produced significant profits – one French politician quipped that the
only French industry to benefit from imperialism was catering for
banquets in Paris, since French colonial interests hosted so many
conferences. Since governments generally stepped in to declare
protectorates and colonies after merchant interests went under, the cost
of maintaining empire grew along with the territorial claims
themselves. Thus, while economic motives were always present, much of
the impetus behind imperialism boiled down to jockeying for position on
the world stage between the increasingly hostile great powers of Europe.