Description
How a speculative frenzy over steam engines bankrupted the British middle class but accidentally built the modern industrial world. In the 1840s, Great Britain lost its collective mind over the power of steam. The invention of the locomotive promised to compress time and space, sparking an unprecedented investment frenzy known as Railway Mania. Middle-class families, aristocrats, and even the clergy poured their life savings into any company proposing to lay iron tracks across the countryside, regardless of how absurd the route was.Unchecked by government regulation, corrupt "Railway Kings" like George Hudson utilized aggressive accounting fraud and paid massive dividends out of capital rather than profit to keep the hype alive. At its peak, Parliament authorized over 8,000 miles of new track, requiring more capital than the entire annual GDP of the nation. When the inevitable crash arrived in 1846, thousands of middle-class investors were instantly bankrupted, and the British economy plunged into a devastating depression.However, unlike the completely useless Tulip Mania, this disastrous financial bubble accidentally left behind a massive, highly functional transportation network that permanently industrialized the empire.This financial history dissects the psychology of technological hype cycles. Economists and historians will understand how the catastrophic ruin of individual investors involuntarily subsidized the greatest infrastructure leap of the Victorian age.
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- 電子書籍
- 人類救済ゲーム【単話版】(125) G…
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- 電子書籍
- 教職研修2025年11月号



