History, asked by ayushraj72, 1 year ago

how did the development of cotton industries in Britain affect the textile producer in India​

Answers

Answered by akasharavindan2003
2

Development of cotton industries in Britain affected the textile producer in India in the following ways

  1. British cloths were usually very cheap as compared to Indian cloths so many poors bought British made cloths
  2. British government imposed heavy tax and duties on indian goods
  3. During industralisation british used different types of machines to produce different types of goods this speed up the production but in india they used human power
  4. Britain took their products to their colony around the world and forced people to buy their goods
  5. they took fine cotton from india at a cheap rate and sold at very high rate.
Answered by Venomll
3

Effects of the development of cotton industries in Britain on the textile producers in India:

(i) Competition - Indian textiles had to compete with British textiles in European and American markets.

(ii) High duties - Exporting textiles to England became increasingly difficult due to the very high duties imposed on Indian textiles imported into Britain.

(iii) Capture of foreign markets - By the beginning of the nineteenth century, English-made cotton textiles ousted Indian textiles from their traditional markets, thereby throwing thousands of Indian weavers out of employment. The English and European companies stopped buying Indian textiles and their agents no longer gave out advances to weavers to secure supplies.

(iv) Capture of the Indian market - By the 1830s, British cotton cloth flooded Indian market. By the 1880s, two-third of all cotton clothes worn by Indians were made of cloth produced in Britain This greatly affected both the weavers an spinners.

Thus, Indian textiles declined in the nineteenth century, and thousands of Indian weavers and spinners lost their livelihood.

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