what was the effect of the weakening of guilds ?
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This weakness is its inability to adjust itself to technological progress. A guild member can not use a new method of manufacture until it has been accepted by the guild and provided for in the regulations. In practice, this acceptance of new methods is next to impossible
Answer:
cupational guilds have been observed for thousands of years in many
economies: ancient Egypt, Greece, and Rome; medieval and early modern
India, Japan, Persia, Byzantium, and Europe; and nineteenth-century
China, Latin America, and the Ottoman Empire.1
Guilds were most prevalent in
manufacturing. Almost all urban craftsmen were guilded and, in parts of central
and southern Europe, many rural artisans as well. But the service sector also had
many guilds. Nearly all premodern economies had guilds of merchants and retailers,
and some also had guilds of painters, musicians, physicians, prostitutes, or chimneysweeps. Guilds were rarest in primary production, but some places had guilds of
farmers, gardeners, wine-growers, shepherds, miners, or fishermen.
Although guilds have existed for millennia in econo
Explanation: