Commerce: exchange of goods that
must be transported from one place to another. In ancient times,
transporting commodities over any significant distance was an expensive
and risky enterprise. This restricted commerce mainly to local markets.
As transportation networks improved, commerce expanded considerably.
Today commerce takes place between neighboring households, between
neighboring cities, and between neighboring continents. Reliable
international shipping, mail services, and the Internet to enable
commerce between people in any location in the world.
After a decline
following the breakup of the Roman Empire, European commerce expanded
gradually during the Middle Ages, especially during the 12th and 13th
centuries. Long-distance trade became safer once merchants began to form
associations for the protection of travelers who journeyed abroad. The
main long-distance trade routes were from the Baltic and the eastern
Mediterranean to central and northern Europe. From the forests of the
Baltic came raw materials: timber, tar, furs, and skins. From the East
came luxury goods: spices, jewelry, and textiles. In exchange for these
goods, western Europe exported raw materials and processed goods. The
English sold woolen garments, the Dutch offered salted herring, Spain
produced wool, and France exported salt; southern Europe was also rich
in wine, fruit, and oil. The Italian and German cities straddling these
routes promoted and financed the trade. Nonetheless, throughout the
Middle Ages, commerce between Europe and Asia was limited, because
overland transport was expensive and because Europe possessed little of
value for export to the East.
The development of
oceangoing warships and efficient merchant ships in the 15th and 16th
centuries led to a rapid expansion of commerce. As the cost of
transporting bulky cargoes over long distances fell, grain was imported
on a large scale from the Baltic to The Netherlands and other parts of
Europe. New ocean routes between Europe and the East allowed imports
from Asia at lower prices and in greater volume than had been possible
by overland caravan. The discovery of the Americas created trade in new
commodities such as tobacco and logwood.
Spanish exploitation
of the rich gold and silver deposits in Mexico and Peru transformed
the character of international commerce. Europe finally possessed a
commodity—precious metal—for which ample demand existed in East Asia.
In return for Asian imports, Europe exchanged silver coin minted in
Mexico, Spain, Italy, and The Netherlands. Using technology and skills
developed in transoceanic navigation, the Europeans captured the Asian
shipping trade. European vessels transported Japanese copper to China
and India, Indian cotton textiles to southern Asia, and Persian
carpets to India. Trade in certain staple commodities grew with
incredible speed. Imports of tobacco into England from Virginia and
Maryland, for example, increased more than a thousand fold in the 17th
century.
As long-distance
trade continued to grow, new forms of commercial organizations appeared.
At first, informal associations gave way to legal partnership. In
Holland, for example, it was not uncommon after 1500 that shareholders,
rather than captains, be the proprietors of ships. Shareholding broke
down the social barriers among different classes of merchants and
enabled individuals to divide their goods among ships destined for
different ports. No longer was international trade limited to those who
could afford to travel. After the 16th century, the chartered trading
company replaced the temporary partnership as the customary way for
merchants to organize their affairs. These great companies, created by
the state but privately owned and managed, held national monopolies over
trade with certain regions.
By 1750 the spice
trade had been far surpassed in importance by trade in primary products.
In the years that followed, commerce was transformed again, this time by
the Industrial Revolution. Because the first Industrial Revolution
occurred in Europe, that continent was at the center of the global
commercial network for much of the 19th century. European economies
depended on foreign markets to supply raw materials and to demand
manufactured goods. The growth of industrial production, therefore, was
accompanied by a rapid expansion of commerce. Between 1750 and 1914,
world trade increased in value fivefold. During the 19th century alone,
world shipping tonnage grew from 4 million to roughly 30 million tons.
European merchants carried the bulk of this trade.
Industrial growth
affected commerce in numerous ways. Initially, the increased
production stimulated trade in raw materials. The mechanization of
European textile production was responsible for a dramatic rise in
U.S. exports of raw cotton. After 1850, trade in grain, meat, and wool
also expanded. Europe became a steady importer of wheat from North
America, Australia, Argentina, and India, paying for its imports with
the products of industry.
Another important
aspect of industrial growth was the revolution in land
transportation. The development of the steam engine and the
construction of railroads promoted commerce between coast and
interior on virtually every continent. The railroad was especially
important in North America, East Asia, and Latin America.
By the end of the
19th century, primary producing regions were no longer the most
important outlets for the products of European and North American
industry. Increasingly, industrial nations became each other's
principal customers, and commerce between the Americas and the
European countries took on a multilateral character. The opposite
was true for the primary producing regions of Africa, Asia, and
Latin America: Many became part of European colonial empires, and
nearly all came to depend heavily on a few foreign markets.
Both internal and
external commerce suffered setbacks during World War I. Trade taxes and
quantitative restrictions were widely imposed, and it took a series of
international conferences during the following decade to dismantle them.
The dismantling of controls, however, was not always accompanied by the
reduction of trade barriers. The United States and many other countries
adopted new customs duties in the 1920s.
With the onset of the
Great Depression in 1929, commerce was disrupted once more. National
commercial policies remained basically unchanged through the end of
1929, but numerous import controls were imposed in 1930 and the
following years. Several relatively self-contained commercial areas
then came into being: the sterling area, which traded primarily with
Britain; the gold bloc, centered on France; and the German and
American trading areas. Within this framework, domestic and foreign
commerce recovered slowly but steadily during the 1930s, only to be
interrupted again by World War II.
The reduction of
trade barriers and the continued expansion of international commerce are
two of the notable achievements of the postwar era. Tariff reductions
have been accomplished through the
General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) and by the creation of
customs unions, such as the
European Union. Although world exports more than doubled in volume
and increased in value by a factor of eight between 1954 and 1974, not
all countries shared equally in this growth. In the 1950s exports from
the industrialized nations of North America and western Europe expanded
rapidly, while exports from the developing countries fell behind. In
contrast, after 1965 the exports of the developing nations grew most
rapidly, in part because of the rising value of oil exports from
petroleum-producing countries. The share of world trade held by Japan
and the European Union rose, but that of the former Soviet republics and
eastern Europe declined.
For the world as a
whole, the value of international commerce (exports plus imports) rose
from $643 billion in 1970 to more than $11.4 trillion in 1999—despite
the efforts of some countries to impose import quotas and negotiate
voluntary export restraints. The outlook for commerce across national
borders was improved in the early 1990s as member nations of GATT
signed a major new treaty that struck down many barriers to free trade
and established the
World Trade Organization (WTO). In addition, regional treaties
such as the
North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) went into effect.
The rapid expansion
of the Internet in the late 1990s led to explosive growth in electronic
commerce (e-commerce)—the exchange of goods and services over the
World Wide Web. Industry analysts reported that North American
business-to-consumer e-commerce transactions grew from $11.5 billion in
1998 to $44.5 billion in 2000.
E-commerce follows
the same basic principles that traditional commerce follows—that is,
buyers and sellers exchange and transport goods from one place to
another. But in e-commerce, the exchange is facilitated by networked
computers. Buyers order goods and services online. They track the status
of their orders via
electronic mail, and in some cases, they receive the goods they
purchase directly over the Internet. Computer software, digital music
and video, online information, and other products and services can all
be distributed in electronic formats. In other cases, products ordered
online are delivered using traditional shipping methods.
At the close of the
20th century, retail transactions made up the largest part of
e-commerce. Consumers purchased computers, airline tickets, hotel
rooms, automobiles, clothing, electronics, books, event tickets, food,
furniture, and countless other commodities over the Internet.
Business-to-business commerce represented one of the fastest growing
segments of e-commerce. Businesses ordered supplies and coordinated
complicated projects electronically.
Democrats set December 2 deadline for automakers' to offer plan
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Stocks adds to losses as oil drops below $50
(Reuters)<p><a href="http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/business/*http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20081120/bs_nm/us_markets_stocks"><img src="http://d.yimg.com/us.yimg.com/p/nm/20081120/2008_11_20t062948_450x298_us_markets_stocks.jpg?x=130&y=86&q=85&sig=iEvt37QpYqc_QXR5EN28hA--" align="left" height="86" width="130" alt="A share trader reacts while checking share prices in front of the German share price index DAX board at the German stock exchange in Frankfurt, November 20, 2008. (Kai Pfaffenbach/Reuters)" border="0" /></a>Reuters - Stocks added to losses on Thursday, led by energy shares as oil fell below $50 a barrel, while investors worried about the prospects for a bailout of battered automakers.</p><br clear="all"/>
GM shares rebound on news of bailout deal
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Citigroup shares tumble further despite Alwaleed move
(Reuters)<p><a href="http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/business/*http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20081120/bs_nm/us_citigroup"><img src="http://d.yimg.com/us.yimg.com/p/nm/20081120/2008_11_20t104925_450x324_us_citigroup.jpg?x=130&y=93&q=85&sig=f8KwFw5iBywiNICkHx35Mg--" align="left" height="93" width="130" alt="Saudi billionaire Prince Alwaleed bin Talal in a file photo. (Ahmed Jadallah/Reuters)" border="0" /></a>Reuters - Citigroup Inc lost as much as a quarter of its market value Thursday as mushrooming worries about whether the bank has enough capital to withstand billions of dollars of additional loan losses outweighed new support from its largest individual investor.</p><br clear="all"/>
Paulson: U.S. has the tools for financial stability
(Reuters)<p><a href="http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/business/*http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20081120/bs_nm/us_financial_paulson"><img src="http://d.yimg.com/us.yimg.com/p/nm/20081120/2008_11_20t144949_450x339_us_financial_paulson.jpg?x=130&y=97&q=85&sig=QPngHC37eRGWadeZcwsVPw--" align="left" height="97" width="130" alt="Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson speaks at the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library in Simi Valley, California, November 20, 2008. (Lucy Nicholson/Reuters)" border="0" /></a>Reuters - Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson said on Thursday that federal authorities have the right tools and have taken the necessary steps to prevent a financial system collapse.</p><br clear="all"/>
London stock market crashes 4.52%
(AFP)<p><a href="http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/business/*http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20081120/wl_uk_afp/stockseuropebritain"><img src="http://d.yimg.com/us.yimg.com/p/afp/20081120/capt.cps.ogs35.201108175528.photo00.photo.default-512x342.jpg?x=130&y=86&q=85&sig=7VRMm2qEJ26RRwLxPlpv6w--" align="left" height="86" width="130" alt="London's FTSE 100 stock index plunged 4.52 percent in afternoon trading on Thursday, amid mounting fears of a deep recession and deflation.(AFP/File/Carl de Souza)" border="0" /></a>AFP - London's FTSE 100 stock index plunged 4.52 percent in afternoon trading on Thursday, amid mounting fears of a deep recession and deflation.</p><br clear="all"/>
The Bank Terrorist
(Investor's Business Daily)Investor's Business Daily - Housing: For years, a self-described "bank terrorist" blackmailed banks into making bad home loans in our inner cities. Now those loans are defaulting by the millions, and he's blaming banks.
British retailers discount to lure shoppers
(AP)<p><a href="http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/business/*http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20081120/ap_on_bi_ge/eu_britain_christmas_shopping"><img src="http://d.yimg.com/us.yimg.com/p/ap/20081120/capt.45edf52decdd4cb7bcfaf4d4cf6ca82b.britain_retail_sales_xag110.jpg?x=130&y=70&q=85&sig=3YIvMvSXVLtQm4dzb1MBlg--" align="left" height="70" width="130" alt="A promoter hands out flyers on a central London shopping street Thursday, Nov. 20, 2008 as the Marks and Spencers chain runs a 20 per cent off sale. Retail sales figures released for the UK show figures down only 0.1% in October despite mounting evidence from retailers such as Woolworths PLC and Marks & Spencer PLC, that business conditions are extremely tough. (AP Photo/Alastair Grant)" border="0" /></a>AP - Britain's top retailers are hoping unusual pre-Christmas discounts can convince consumers to open their wallets during a holiday season that coincides with a looming recession.</p><br clear="all"/>