Industry
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- For other uses of this term, see Industry (disambiguation)
Industry in the second sense became a key sector of production in European and North American countries during the Industrial Revolution, which upset previous mercantile and feudal economies through many successive rapid advances in technology, such as the development of steam engines, power looms, and advances in large scale steel and coal production. Industrial countries then assumed a capitalist economic policy. Railroads and steam-powered ships began speedily integrating previously impossibly-distant world markets, enabling private companies to develop to then-unheard of size and wealth. Following the Industrial Revolution, perhaps a third of the world's economic output is derived from manufacturing industries—more than agriculture's share, but now less than that of the service sector.
In economics and urban planning, industrial is an intensive type of land use and economic activity involved with manufacturing and production.
See also
- Primary sector of industry
- Secondary sector of industry
- Tertiary sector of industry
- Quaternary sector of industry
- Industrial policy
- Adam Smith
- Colin Clark's Sector Model
- capitalism
- communism
- economics
- Industrial archaeology
- Marxism
- political economy
- Industrial process
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