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Bread upon the Waters: The St. Petersburg Grain Trade and Russian Economy 1703-1811 - Russian & East European Studies Book 233 | Historical Research on Imperial Russia's Agricultural Trade for Scholars & History Enthusiasts
$25.85
$47
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Bread upon the Waters: The St. Petersburg Grain Trade and Russian Economy 1703-1811 - Russian & East European Studies Book 233 | Historical Research on Imperial Russia's Agricultural Trade for Scholars & History Enthusiasts
Bread upon the Waters: The St. Petersburg Grain Trade and Russian Economy 1703-1811 - Russian & East European Studies Book 233 | Historical Research on Imperial Russia's Agricultural Trade for Scholars & History Enthusiasts
Bread upon the Waters: The St. Petersburg Grain Trade and Russian Economy 1703-1811 - Russian & East European Studies Book 233 | Historical Research on Imperial Russia's Agricultural Trade for Scholars & History Enthusiasts
$25.85
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Description
In eighteenth-century Russia, as elsewhere in Europe, bread was a dietary staple—truly grain was the staff of economic, social, and political life. Early on Tsar Peter the Great founded St. Petersburg to export goods from Russia’s vast but remote interior and by doing so to drive Russia’s growth and prosperity. But the new city also had to be fed with grain brought over great distances from those same interior provinces. In this compelling account, Robert E. Jones chronicles how the unparalleled effort put into the building of a wide infrastructure to support the provisioning of the newly created but physically isolated city of St. Petersburg profoundly affected all of Russia’s economic life and, ultimately, the historical trajectory of the Russian Empire as a whole. Jones details the planning, engineering, and construction of extensive canal systems that efficiently connected the new capital city to grain and other resources as far away as the Urals, the Volga, and Ukraine. He then offers fresh insights to the state’s careful promotion and management of the grain trade during the long eighteenth century. He shows how the government established public granaries to combat shortages, created credit instruments to encourage risk taking by grain merchants, and encouraged the development of capital markets and private enterprise. The result was the emergence of an increasingly important cash economy along with a reliable system of provisioning the fifth largest city in Europe, with the political benefit that St. Petersburg never suffered the food riots common elsewhere in Europe. Thanks to this well-regulated but distinctly free-market trade arrangement, the grain-fueled economy became a wellspring for national economic growth, while also providing a substantial infrastructural foundation for a modernizing Russian state. In many ways, this account reveals the foresight of both Peter I and Catherine II and their determination to steer imperial Russia’s national economy away from statist solutions and onto a path remarkably similar to that taken by Western European countries but distinctly different than that of either their Muscovite predecessors or Soviet successors.
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5
This is a great book. It's not a weekend, beach read. It isn't like some of the more narrative, fast-paced histories. But it's good.Jones covers, in incredible depth, all of the minutiae of the Russian grain trade in the 1700s. It covers the entire range from the creation of St. Petersburg, the different types of land in the surrounding area, government agriculture policy, contract law, etc...It's a very remarkable look into business in Russia during that period. You can see the changes and how things evolved, and the parallels to modern business.

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