34 KiB
--- MAPPING: market-extent-to-system-4-intelligence-adaptation ---
Market Extent -> System 4 (Intelligence/Adaptation)
Economic Entity Reference
Entity: market-extent
Definition: The geographical and economic reach of a market, determining the potential size of demand for goods and services. The extent of the market directly limits the degree to which division of labour can be developed, as a larger market provides greater opportunity for exchange and specialisation.
Source Chapter: Book I, Chapter 3
Context: Smith argues that the division of labour is fundamentally constrained by how far goods can be exchanged. When markets are small, individuals cannot specialise fully because they cannot exchange their surplus production for other goods they need.
Economic Domain: Exchange
VSM Concept Reference
System 4: Intelligence/Adaptation - The bodies and processes that look outward to the environment to monitor how the organisation needs to adapt to remain viable. System 4 captures all relevant information about the outside-and-then environment. It is responsible for strategic responses.
Key Properties: Environmental scanning, future orientation, strategic planning, modelling, research and development.
Mapping Rationale
Market extent functions as System 4 by scanning the environmental constraints that determine economic viability. Smith's analysis of how geographical reach affects division of labour represents strategic environmental intelligence - understanding the "outside-and-then" conditions that shape what economic organisation is possible. The market's extent determines the adaptive possibilities for specialisation, just as System 4 determines what strategic responses an organisation can make based on environmental scanning.
Mapping Strength
Strong
--- MAPPING: water-carriage-to-system-1-operations ---
Water-Carriage -> System 1 (Operations)
Economic Entity Reference
Entity: water-carriage
Definition: Transportation of goods by water using ships and boats, which significantly reduces the cost and increases the speed of moving commodities compared to land-carriage. Water-carriage enables a much broader market extent by making distant trade economically feasible.
Source Chapter: Book I, Chapter 3
Context: Smith uses water-carriage as a key example to demonstrate how transportation technology affects market extent. He contrasts the efficiency of ships (two hundred tons carried by six or eight men) with land transport (the same quantity requiring fifty waggons, a hundred men, and four hundred horses).
Economic Domain: Exchange
VSM Concept Reference
System 1: Operations - The primary activities that produce the organisation's purpose. These are the operational units that directly create value. Each operational element is itself a viable system.
Key Properties: Autonomy within constraints, self-organisation, direct engagement with the environment.
Mapping Rationale
Water-carriage operates as the primary productive mechanism that directly creates economic value through transportation. It is the operational unit that physically moves goods and enables exchange, performing the fundamental productive function of System 1. Smith presents it as the autonomous operational activity that directly engages with the environment to create market opportunities, with ships and sailors functioning as the operational elements that produce the organisation's purpose of exchange.
Mapping Strength
Strong
--- MAPPING: land-carriage-to-system-2-coordination ---
Land-Carriage -> System 2 (Coordination)
Economic Entity Reference
Entity: land-carriage
Definition: Transportation of goods by land using waggons, carts, and pack animals. Land-carriage is significantly more expensive than water-carriage due to higher labour costs, animal maintenance, and wear and tear on vehicles, thus limiting market extent and the division of labour.
Source Chapter: Book I, Chapter 3
Context: Smith uses land-carriage as a comparative example to illustrate the limitations of market extent. He calculates that land-carriage requires the maintenance of a hundred men for three weeks and four hundred horses to move two hundred tons, making it economically prohibitive for many goods.
Economic Domain: Exchange
VSM Concept Reference
System 2: Coordination - The information channels and bodies that allow the primary activities in System 1 to communicate with each other and that allow System 3 to monitor and coordinate activities. System 2 dampens oscillations and resolves conflicts between operational units.
Key Properties: Anti-oscillatory, dampening, scheduling, conflict resolution, standardisation.
Mapping Rationale
Land-carriage functions as System 2 by coordinating and regulating the flow of goods between different operational units (producers and consumers). Its higher costs and limitations act as a dampening mechanism on market oscillations, preventing excessive trade and maintaining balance between supply and demand. The comparative inefficiency of land-carriage relative to water-carriage creates a natural coordination mechanism that channels economic activity through more efficient routes, similar to how System 2 resolves conflicts between operational units.
Mapping Strength
Moderate
--- MAPPING: navigable-rivers-to-system-3-control-operational-management ---
Navigable Rivers -> System 3 (Control/Operational Management)
Economic Entity Reference
Entity: navigable-rivers
Definition: Rivers that can be used for the transportation of goods by boat or ship, serving as natural highways that connect inland areas to coastal markets. Navigable rivers extend the reach of water-carriage into the interior of countries, enabling the development of markets and division of labour in inland regions.
Source Chapter: Book I, Chapter 3
Context: Smith identifies navigable rivers as crucial infrastructure for economic development, noting that industry naturally begins to subdivide and improve itself along their banks. He uses examples like the Nile in Egypt and various rivers in China to show how inland navigation creates extensive markets that support specialisation.
Economic Domain: Exchange
VSM Concept Reference
System 3: Control/Operational Management - The structures and controls that establish the rules, resources, rights, and responsibilities of System 1 and provide an interface between Systems 1 and Systems 4/5. System 3 represents the day-to-day control of the organisation. It optimises the internal environment.
Key Properties: Internal regulation, resource allocation, accountability, synergy extraction, performance management.
Mapping Rationale
Navigable rivers function as System 3 by establishing the rules and infrastructure that govern internal economic operations. They create the framework within which System 1 activities (production and exchange) must operate, determining resource allocation patterns and performance possibilities. Smith shows how rivers regulate where industry can develop and how specialisation patterns emerge, performing the internal regulatory function that System 3 provides for operational units.
Mapping Strength
Strong
--- MAPPING: sea-coast-development-to-system-5-policy-identity ---
Sea-Coast Development -> System 5 (Policy/Identity)
Economic Entity Reference
Entity: sea-coast-development
Definition: The pattern of economic development that occurs first along coastlines where water-carriage provides access to the widest possible markets. Sea-coast regions historically develop industry, trade, and division of labour before inland areas due to their superior access to extensive markets.
Source Chapter: Book I, Chapter 3
Context: Smith argues that improvements in art and industry naturally begin where water-carriage opens the whole world as a market, and only later extend to inland parts of the country. He uses examples from North American colonies and Mediterranean civilizations to demonstrate this developmental pattern.
Economic Domain: Production
VSM Concept Reference
System 5: Policy/Identity - The policy-making body that balances demands from Systems 3 and 4 and defines the identity, values, and purpose of the organisation. System 5 provides closure to the whole system and represents its supreme authority.
Key Properties: Identity, ethos, supreme command, policy closure, balancing internal and external perspectives.
Mapping Rationale
Sea-coast development represents System 5 by establishing the fundamental identity and policy framework for economic organisation. The coastal pattern defines the overarching purpose and developmental trajectory of the entire economic system, setting the identity that inland regions must eventually follow. Smith presents this as the supreme developmental authority that determines where and how economic improvement begins, balancing the external opportunities of maritime access with internal development needs.
Mapping Strength
Strong
--- MAPPING: inland-parts-of-the-country-to-system-3*-audit-monitoring ---
Inland Parts of the Country -> System 3* (Audit/Monitoring)
Inland Parts of the Country -> System 3* (Audit/Monitoring)
Economic Entity Reference
Entity: inland-parts-of-the-country
Definition: The interior regions of a country that are distant from sea-coasts and navigable rivers, having limited market access compared to coastal areas. These regions develop industry and division of labour later than coastal areas due to restricted market extent and higher transportation costs.
Source Chapter: Book I, Chapter 3
Context: Smith contrasts inland regions with coastal areas, explaining why industry and improvements in art are "much later in extending themselves into the inland parts of the country." He attributes this to the limited market size and higher transportation costs that restrict the division of labour in these areas.
Economic Domain: Production
VSM Concept Reference
System 3:* Audit/Monitoring - The audit and monitoring channel that allows System 3 to verify information coming from System 1 through channels other than those provided by System 2. System 3* provides sporadic, direct access to operational reality.
Key Properties: Sporadic direct investigation, reality checking, bypassing normal reporting channels.
Mapping Rationale
Inland regions function as System 3* by providing direct, unfiltered access to the operational reality that coastal System 3 management might miss through normal coordination channels. Their isolation and different development patterns serve as an audit mechanism that reveals the true limitations and possibilities of economic organisation when coordination channels (water-carriage) are absent. Smith uses inland regions to verify and test the theories about market extent and division of labour that emerge from coastal observations.
Mapping Strength
Moderate
--- MAPPING: market-town-economy-to-system-2-coordination ---
Market-Town Economy -> System 2 (Coordination)
Economic Entity Reference
Entity: market-town-economy
Definition: The economic organisation of small urban centres that provide limited but essential market access for surrounding rural areas. Market towns enable a degree of specialisation beyond what is possible in isolated villages, though they cannot support the full division of labour possible in larger cities.
Source Chapter: Book I, Chapter 3
Context: Smith uses the example of a porter who can find employment and subsistence only in a great town, not in a village or even an ordinary market-town. This illustrates how different sizes of markets support different degrees of specialisation and division of labour.
Economic Domain: Exchange
VSM Concept Reference
System 2: Coordination - The information channels and bodies that allow the primary activities in System 1 to communicate with each other and that allow System 3 to monitor and coordinate activities. System 2 dampens oscillations and resolves conflicts between operational units.
Key Properties: Anti-oscillatory, dampening, scheduling, conflict resolution, standardisation.
Mapping Rationale
Market towns coordinate between isolated rural System 1 units and larger urban centres, functioning as the communication channels that System 2 provides. They dampen the oscillations between extreme self-sufficiency and full specialisation, creating a middle ground that resolves the conflict between limited and extensive markets. The market town's role in standardising exchange relationships and scheduling trade between different economic units mirrors System 2's coordination function.
Mapping Strength
Strong
--- MAPPING: subsistence-agriculture-to-system-1-operations ---
Subsistence Agriculture -> System 1 (Operations)
Economic Entity Reference
Entity: subsistence-agriculture
Definition: The agricultural practice in which farmers produce primarily for their own family's consumption rather than for market exchange. In subsistence agriculture, farmers must perform all necessary tasks themselves, preventing specialisation and limiting the division of labour.
Source Chapter: Book I, Chapter 3
Context: Smith describes how in the remote highlands of Scotland, every farmer must be "butcher, baker, and brewer for his own family," illustrating how limited market access forces self-sufficiency and prevents the division of labour even in basic economic activities.
Economic Domain: Production
VSM Concept Reference
System 1: Operations - The primary activities that produce the organisation's purpose. These are the operational units that directly create value. Each operational element is itself a viable system.
Key Properties: Autonomy within constraints, self-organisation, direct engagement with the environment.
Mapping Rationale
Subsistence agriculture operates as System 1 by performing the fundamental productive activities that directly create value for the household. The farmer operates as an autonomous operational unit that self-organises to meet all needs, directly engaging with the environment without coordination from higher systems. This represents the most basic form of System 1 operation - complete self-sufficiency where the operational unit contains all necessary functions within itself.
Mapping Strength
Strong
--- MAPPING: artisan-specialisation-to-system-1-operations ---
Artisan Specialisation -> System 1 (Operations)
Economic Entity Reference
Entity: artisan-specialisation
Definition: The concentration of skilled workers on specific crafts or trades, enabled by sufficient market demand to support dedicated practitioners. Artisan specialisation requires market extent large enough to absorb the full output of specialists who no longer perform multiple tasks.
Source Chapter: Book I, Chapter 3
Context: Smith notes that in remote areas, one cannot even expect to find a smith, carpenter, or mason within twenty miles of another of the same trade, whereas in more populous areas, artisans can specialise fully in their craft due to adequate market demand.
Economic Domain: Production
VSM Concept Reference
System 1: Operations - The primary activities that produce the organisation's purpose. These are the operational units that directly create value. Each operational element is itself a viable system.
Key Properties: Autonomy within constraints, self-organisation, direct engagement with the environment.
Mapping Rationale
Artisan specialisation represents System 1 operations at a more developed level, where individual craftsmen operate as autonomous units focused on specific productive functions. Each artisan becomes a self-organising operational element that directly engages with the market environment to create value through specialised production. The specialisation itself emerges from the operational autonomy granted by sufficient market demand, mirroring how System 1 units operate within constraints set by higher systems.
Mapping Strength
Strong
--- MAPPING: mediterranean-civilisation-pattern-to-system-5-policy-identity ---
Mediterranean Civilisation Pattern -> System 5 (Policy/Identity)
Economic Entity Reference
Entity: mediterranean-civilisation-pattern
Definition: The historical pattern of early economic development that occurred around the Mediterranean Sea due to its favourable geography for navigation and trade. This pattern demonstrates how natural advantages in transportation create conditions for early specialisation, industry, and civilisation.
Source Chapter: Book I, Chapter 3
Context: Smith identifies the Mediterranean region as the first area of civilisation, attributing this to the sea's smoothness, numerous islands, and proximity of neighbouring shores, which made navigation accessible even to early peoples without compasses or advanced ship-building.
Economic Domain: General Theory
VSM Concept Reference
System 5: Policy/Identity - The policy-making body that balances demands from Systems 3 and 4 and defines the identity, values, and purpose of the organisation. System 5 provides closure to the whole system and represents its supreme authority.
Key Properties: Identity, ethos, supreme command, policy closure, balancing internal and external perspectives.
Mapping Rationale
The Mediterranean civilisation pattern functions as System 5 by establishing the fundamental identity and developmental policy for economic organisation. It represents the supreme authority that determines where civilisation begins and sets the identity that other regions must eventually follow. Smith presents this geographical pattern as the policy framework that balances the external opportunities of favourable geography with internal development needs, providing closure to the question of why economic development occurs where it does.
Mapping Strength
Strong
--- MAPPING: river-navigation-infrastructure-to-system-3-control-operational-management ---
River Navigation Infrastructure -> System 3 (Control/Operational Management)
Economic Entity Reference
Entity: river-navigation-infrastructure
Definition: The natural and artificial waterways, including canals and improved river channels, that facilitate the movement of goods and people. River navigation infrastructure creates extensive inland markets that support industry, specialisation, and economic development.
Source Chapter: Book I, Chapter 3
Context: Smith cites examples from Egypt, Bengal, and China where great rivers and their canals created extensive inland navigation systems that supported early improvements in agriculture and manufactures, demonstrating how transportation infrastructure determines market extent and economic development.
Economic Domain: Exchange
VSM Concept Reference
System 3: Control/Operational Management - The structures and controls that establish the rules, resources, rights, and responsibilities of System 1 and provide an interface between Systems 1 and Systems 4/5. System 3 represents the day-to-day control of the organisation. It optimises the internal environment.
Key Properties: Internal regulation, resource allocation, accountability, synergy extraction, performance management.
Mapping Rationale
River navigation infrastructure operates as System 3 by establishing the regulatory framework that governs internal economic operations. It creates the rules and resources that determine how System 1 activities (production and exchange) can operate, allocating access to markets and setting performance parameters. Smith shows how river systems regulate where industry can develop and how specialisation patterns emerge, performing the internal regulatory function that System 3 provides for operational units.
Mapping Strength
Strong
--- MAPPING: market-obstruction-to-system-3-control-operational-management ---
Market Obstruction -> System 3 (Control/Operational Management)
Economic Entity Reference
Entity: market-obstruction
Definition: The artificial or natural barriers that prevent the free flow of goods between different regions, thereby limiting market extent and the division of labour. Market obstructions can be caused by political boundaries, poor infrastructure, or geographical barriers.
Source Chapter: Book I, Chapter 3
Context: Smith discusses how nations possessing territory through which a river flows can obstruct communication between upper country and the sea, limiting commerce and preventing the full development of markets and specialisation in affected regions.
Economic Domain: Regulation
VSM Concept Reference
System 3: Control/Operational Management - The structures and controls that establish the rules, resources, rights, and responsibilities of System 1 and provide an interface between Systems 1 and Systems 4/5. System 3 represents the day-to-day control of the organisation. It optimises the internal environment.
Key Properties: Internal regulation, resource allocation, accountability, synergy extraction, performance management.
Mapping Rationale
Market obstructions function as System 3 by establishing regulatory controls that govern internal economic operations. They create the rules and constraints that determine how System 1 activities can operate, allocating resources and setting performance parameters through limitation rather than facilitation. Smith shows how obstructions regulate where industry can develop and how specialisation patterns are constrained, performing the internal regulatory function that System 3 provides, albeit in a restrictive rather than optimising manner.
Mapping Strength
Moderate
--- MAPPING: barbarous-nations-barrier-to-system-4-intelligence-adaptation ---
Barbarous Nations Barrier -> System 4 (Intelligence/Adaptation)
Economic Entity Reference
Entity: barbarous-nations-barrier
Definition: The political and security obstacles created by regions inhabited by peoples considered "barbarous" or hostile, which prevent safe trade between distant markets. These barriers significantly increase the costs and risks of long-distance commerce, limiting market extent.
Source Chapter: Book I, Chapter 3
Context: Smith raises the question of how goods could be safely transported through the territories of "so many barbarous nations" between London and Calcutta, illustrating how political instability and security concerns can obstruct market development even when natural transportation advantages exist.
Economic Domain: Regulation
VSM Concept Reference
System 4: Intelligence/Adaptation - The bodies and processes that look outward to the environment to monitor how the organisation needs to adapt to remain viable. System 4 captures all relevant information about the outside-and-then environment. It is responsible for strategic responses.
Key Properties: Environmental scanning, future orientation, strategic planning, modelling, research and development.
Mapping Rationale
Barbarous nations barriers function as System 4 by representing the environmental intelligence that determines adaptive possibilities for economic organisation. They scan the external political and security environment to identify constraints on market development and trade routes. Smith's analysis of how these barriers affect long-distance commerce represents strategic environmental scanning - understanding the "outside-and-then" conditions that shape what economic organisation is possible and what adaptive responses are required.
Mapping Strength
Strong
--- MAPPING: inland-navigation-extent-to-system-4-intelligence-adaptation ---
Inland Navigation Extent -> System 4 (Intelligence/Adaptation)
Economic Entity Reference
Entity: inland-navigation-extent
Definition: The total geographical area that can be reached through navigable waterways, including rivers, canals, and other water routes. The extent of inland navigation determines the size of markets available to producers in interior regions and thus limits or enables the division of labour.
Source Chapter: Book I, Chapter 3
Context: Smith compares the extensive inland navigation possible in Egypt through the Nile's canals, in Bengal through the Ganges, and in China through its river systems, showing how these natural advantages created large markets that supported early economic development.
Economic Domain: Exchange
VSM Concept Reference
System 4: Intelligence/Adaptation - The bodies and processes that look outward to the environment to monitor how the organisation needs to adapt to remain viable. System 4 captures all relevant information about the outside-and-then environment. It is responsible for strategic responses.
Key Properties: Environmental scanning, future orientation, strategic planning, modelling, research and development.
Mapping Rationale
Inland navigation extent functions as System 4 by providing strategic intelligence about the environmental constraints and opportunities that determine economic viability. It represents the environmental scanning of geographical possibilities that shape what adaptive responses are available to economic systems. Smith's analysis of how different river systems create different market extents represents strategic planning based on environmental intelligence - understanding the "outside-and-then" conditions that determine what levels of specialisation and division of labour are possible.
Mapping Strength
Strong
--- MAPPING: market-size-threshold-to-system-3-control-operational-management ---
Market Size Threshold -> System 3 (Control/Operational Management)
Economic Entity Reference
Entity: market-size-threshold
Definition: The minimum size of a market required to support full specialisation in a particular trade or craft. Below this threshold, artisans must perform multiple tasks or remain part-time specialists, while above it they can focus exclusively on their specialised work.
Source Chapter: Book I, Chapter 3
Context: Smith illustrates market size thresholds through examples: a village is "by much too narrow a sphere" for a porter, an ordinary market-town is "scarce large enough to afford him constant occupation," while only a great town provides sufficient demand for full-time specialisation.
Economic Domain: Exchange
VSM Concept Reference
System 3: Control/Operational Management - The structures and controls that establish the rules, resources, rights, and responsibilities of System 1 and provide an interface between Systems 1 and Systems 4/5. System 3 represents the day-to-day control of the organisation. It optimises the internal environment.
Key Properties: Internal regulation, resource allocation, accountability, synergy extraction, performance management.
Mapping Rationale
Market size thresholds function as System 3 by establishing the regulatory framework that governs operational possibilities for System 1 units. They create the rules and resource allocation parameters that determine whether specialisation is viable, setting performance standards and accountability measures for different market sizes. Smith shows how these thresholds regulate what types of economic activities can operate in different environments, performing the internal regulatory function that System 3 provides for operational units.
Mapping Strength
Strong
--- MAPPING: economic-geography-to-system-5-policy-identity ---
Economic Geography -> System 5 (Policy/Identity)
Economic Entity Reference
Entity: economic-geography
Definition: The relationship between physical geography and economic development, particularly how natural features like coastlines, rivers, and terrain affect market extent, transportation costs, and the pattern of industrial development across different regions.
Source Chapter: Book I, Chapter 3
Context: Smith's entire analysis demonstrates economic geography by showing how natural features determine market extent: smooth seas with islands favour early navigation, navigable rivers create inland markets, and frozen oceans or distant rivers prevent commerce in certain regions.
Economic Domain: General Theory
VSM Concept Reference
System 5: Policy/Identity - The policy-making body that balances demands from Systems 3 and 4 and defines the identity, values, and purpose of the organisation. System 5 provides closure to the whole system and represents its supreme authority.
Key Properties: Identity, ethos, supreme command, policy closure, balancing internal and external perspectives.
Mapping Rationale
Economic geography functions as System 5 by establishing the fundamental identity and policy framework for economic organisation. It represents the supreme authority that determines why economic development occurs where it does, setting the identity and developmental trajectory for the entire economic system. Smith presents geographical patterns as the policy framework that balances the external opportunities of natural features with internal development needs, providing closure to the question of economic organisation patterns.
Mapping Strength
Strong
--- MAPPING: trade-encouragement-to-system-2-coordination ---
Trade Encouragement -> System 2 (Coordination)
Economic Entity Reference
Entity: trade-encouragement
Definition: The mutual benefits that regions or nations provide to each other's industries through market exchange. Trade encouragement occurs when different areas specialise in their comparative advantages and exchange goods, creating incentives for further production and development.
Source Chapter: Book I, Chapter 3
Context: Smith concludes that London and Edinburgh "at present carry on a very considerable commerce with each other, and by mutually affording a market, give a good deal of encouragement to each other's industry," demonstrating how market exchange creates reciprocal benefits.
Economic Domain: Exchange
VSM Concept Reference
System 2: Coordination - The information channels and bodies that allow the primary activities in System 1 to communicate with each other and that allow System 3 to monitor and coordinate activities. System 2 dampens oscillations and resolves conflicts between operational units.
Key Properties: Anti-oscillatory, dampening, scheduling, conflict resolution, standardisation.
Mapping Rationale
Trade encouragement functions as System 2 by coordinating between different operational units (regions or nations) through market exchange mechanisms. It creates the communication channels that allow different economic activities to align their production with each other's needs, dampening the oscillations between overproduction and underproduction. The mutual benefits of trade resolve the conflict between self-sufficiency and specialisation, standardising exchange relationships between different economic units.
Mapping Strength
Strong
--- MAPPING: frozen-ocean-barrier-to-system-4-intelligence-adaptation ---
Frozen Ocean Barrier -> System 4 (Intelligence/Adaptation)
Economic Entity Reference
Entity: frozen-ocean-barrier
Definition: The natural barrier to navigation and trade created by Arctic and sub-Arctic waters that remain frozen for much of the year. Frozen oceans prevent maritime commerce and limit the development of markets and specialisation in regions dependent on such waterways.
Source Chapter: Book I, Chapter 3
Context: Smith identifies the frozen ocean of Tartary as a barrier that admits of no navigation, contributing to the barbarous and uncivilized state of inland Africa and northern Asia by preventing maritime commerce and limiting market development.
Economic Domain: Exchange
VSM Concept Reference
System 4: Intelligence/Adaptation - The bodies and processes that look outward to the environment to monitor how the organisation needs to adapt to remain viable. System 4 captures all relevant information about the outside-and-then environment. It is responsible for strategic responses.
Key Properties: Environmental scanning, future orientation, strategic planning, modelling, research and development.
Mapping Rationale
Frozen ocean barriers function as System 4 by representing critical environmental intelligence about constraints on economic viability. They scan the external geographical environment to identify limitations on market development and trade possibilities. Smith's analysis of how these barriers affect economic development represents strategic environmental scanning - understanding the "outside-and-then" conditions that determine what adaptive responses are possible and what strategic planning is required for regions facing such constraints.
Mapping Strength
Strong
--- MAPPING: canal-communication-to-system-3-control-operational-management ---
Canal Communication -> System 3 (Control/Operational Management)
Economic Entity Reference
Entity: canal-communication
Definition: The artificial waterways constructed to connect rivers, lakes, or seas, creating extended networks for the transportation of goods. Canal communication dramatically increases market extent by linking previously isolated regions and reducing transportation costs.
Source Chapter: Book I, Chapter 3
Context: Smith describes how the Nile breaks into many different canals in Lower Egypt, and how the Ganges and Chinese rivers form navigable canals, creating communication systems that support extensive markets and enable the division of labour in these regions.
Economic Domain: Exchange
VSM Concept Reference
System 3: Control/Operational Management - The structures and controls that establish the rules, resources, rights, and responsibilities of System 1 and provide an interface between Systems 1 and Systems 4/5. System 3 represents the day-to-day control of the organisation. It optim