History, asked by Terabaap7659, 11 months ago

Describe any three major problems faced by indian weavers in 19th century

Answers

Answered by Mangalasrinivasan949
0

Answer:

Hello user

Hello userthere were three major problems which the indian weavers faced during the 19th century...

Hello userthere were three major problems which the indian weavers faced during the 19th century...a. machinery power

Hello userthere were three major problems which the indian weavers faced during the 19th century...a. machinery powerb.insufficient supply of raw materials

c. Hike in Indian imports

Explanation:

a. Factories in India began producing and flooding the markets with machinery goods..Produce by machines were too cheap to compete with the costly goods as machinery goods were more significantly getting sold...

a. Factories in India began producing and flooding the markets with machinery goods..Produce by machines were too cheap to compete with the costly goods as machinery goods were more significantly getting sold...b.insufficient supply of raw materials: With the commencement of the American Civil War, cotton supplies fork the US were cut off,Britain turned to India.As raw cotton exports from India increased, the process of raw cotton shot up..Weavers in India were starved of supplies and forced to buy raw cotton at exorbitant prices.

a. Factories in India began producing and flooding the markets with machinery goods..Produce by machines were too cheap to compete with the costly goods as machinery goods were more significantly getting sold...b.insufficient supply of raw materials: With the commencement of the American Civil War, cotton supplies fork the US were cut off,Britain turned to India.As raw cotton exports from India increased, the process of raw cotton shot up..Weavers in India were starved of supplies and forced to buy raw cotton at exorbitant prices.c. Hike in Indian imports: Industrialists persuaded the EIC to sell British cotton goods in Indian markets as well.Exports of British cotton goods increased drastically.Virtually there had been no cotton imports into India.But by 1850 cotton constituted over 31%of the value of Indian imports,and by the 1870's this was over 50%..

a. Factories in India began producing and flooding the markets with machinery goods..Produce by machines were too cheap to compete with the costly goods as machinery goods were more significantly getting sold...b.insufficient supply of raw materials: With the commencement of the American Civil War, cotton supplies fork the US were cut off,Britain turned to India.As raw cotton exports from India increased, the process of raw cotton shot up..Weavers in India were starved of supplies and forced to buy raw cotton at exorbitant prices.c. Hike in Indian imports: Industrialists persuaded the EIC to sell British cotton goods in Indian markets as well.Exports of British cotton goods increased drastically.Virtually there had been no cotton imports into India.But by 1850 cotton constituted over 31%of the value of Indian imports,and by the 1870's this was over 50%..Hope it has helped u dear...

Answered by CᴀɴᴅʏCʀᴜsʜ
0

Answer:

The problem faced by Indian cotton weavers continued. They were as follows:

i. Their export market collapsed due to increase in import duties on them in England .

ii. Their local market shrank as they were flooded with cheap Manchester imports .

iii. They could not get sufficient supply of raw cotton of goods quality. When the American civil war broke out and cotton supplies from the U.S. were cut off, Britain turned to India. Indian weavers were forced to buy cotton at a very high price.

Explanation:

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