Between 1750 and 1900, the demand for raw materials and food to feed industrial factories and growing cities pushed many regions into export economies. These places specialized in extracting natural resources or producing food and industrial crops, then used the profits to buy finished goods from industrialized states.
AP World 6.4 Global Economic Development
AP World 6.4 focuses on how environmental and economic factors helped build a global economy from 1750 to 1900. Industrial factories needed raw materials, and growing cities needed food, so many regions specialized in export economies.
The key pattern is specialization: regions produced or extracted commodities like cotton, rubber, palm oil, guano, meat, or diamonds, then used export profits to buy finished goods from industrialized states.

Why This Matters for the AP World History Exam
This topic connects environmental and economic factors to the growth of a global economy, which is exactly the kind of cause-and-effect thinking the AP World History exam rewards. You can use export economies as evidence in arguments about how industrialization reshaped the world, and you can compare how different regions fit into global trade. It also pairs naturally with imperialism and migration topics in Unit 6, so the resource-extraction story shows up across causation, comparison, and continuity-and-change reasoning.
Key Takeaways
- Industrial factories needed raw materials and growing cities needed food, which drove the rise of export economies around the world.
- Export economies specialized in commercial extraction of natural resources or in producing food and industrial crops.
- Profits from raw material exports were used to purchase finished manufactured goods, reinforcing a one-sided trade relationship.
- Environmental factors, like where certain resources or growing conditions existed, helped determine which regions became export economies.
- Examples include Egyptian cotton, Amazon and Congo rubber, West African palm oil, Peruvian and Chilean guano, Argentine and Uruguayan meat, and African diamonds.
Export Economies and Global Trade Networks
As industrialized states expanded their factories, they needed steady supplies of raw materials. At the same time, growing urban populations needed more food. These two pressures pushed many regions into becoming export economies that focused on commercial extraction of natural resources or on producing food and industrial crops.
The basic pattern looked like this: a region extracted or grew a specific commodity, exported it to industrial markets, and then used the profits to buy finished goods made elsewhere. This kept many export regions dependent on a small number of commodities and on prices set by industrial buyers.
The examples below are illustrative cases that show how this pattern worked across different environments. They are not a required list to memorize, but they make strong evidence in an argument.
| Export Commodity | Major Regions of Extraction | Industrial Use / Demand Driver |
|---|---|---|
| Cotton | Egypt, South Asia | Textile manufacturing in Britain and Europe |
| Rubber | Amazon Basin, Congo Basin | Industrial machinery, later tires and insulation |
| Palm oil | West Africa | Soap, candles, lubricants for machines |
| Guano | Peru, Chile | Fertilizer to replenish farmland |
| Meat | Argentina, Uruguay | Food supply for growing urban populations |
| Diamonds | Africa | Luxury goods and industrial cutting tools |
How Environment Shaped Export Economies
The learning focus here is environmental factors, so it helps to think about why certain commodities came from certain places. Resources and growing conditions are tied to geography, and that geography helped decide which regions specialized in what.
- Rubber came from tropical rainforest regions like the Amazon and Congo basins, where the trees naturally grew.
- Guano, a nitrogen-rich fertilizer, came from coastal areas in Peru and Chile where seabird deposits built up.
- Cotton thrived in warm climates like Egypt and parts of South Asia, which made those regions valuable to textile producers.
- Cattle ranching in Argentina and Uruguay took advantage of large grassland plains suited to raising livestock for meat export.
When you explain causation on this topic, connecting the physical environment to the kind of export economy that developed is a strong move.
Technology and Global Integration
New transportation and communication technology made it cheaper and faster to move raw materials from extraction zones to industrial markets. This tighter integration is what turned scattered export regions into parts of a single global economy.
- Railroads connected interior extraction sites to coastal ports.
- Steamships made ocean shipping faster and more predictable.
- Telegraphs allowed quicker communication about prices and orders across long distances.
- The Suez Canal (opened 1869) shortened key trade routes between Europe and Asia.
Use these as supporting examples of how industrial-era technology reinforced export economies, not as required content for this topic.
How to Use This on the AP World History Exam
Causation
Be ready to explain how environmental and economic factors caused the growth of a global economy. The cleanest cause-and-effect chain is: industrial factories and growing cities created demand, that demand pushed regions into resource extraction and cash-crop production, and profits were used to buy finished goods.
Evidence and Examples
Keep two or three specific export economies ready to use as evidence. Egyptian cotton, Amazon or Congo rubber, and Peruvian guano are reliable choices because each clearly links an environment to a commodity to an industrial demand.
Comparison
You can compare how different regions participated in the global economy. Some areas exported a single dominant commodity, while industrial states produced and sold finished goods. Showing that contrast strengthens a comparison argument.
Common Trap
Do not turn this into a pure imperialism essay. This topic is about the economic and environmental development of the global economy. Economic imperialism is the focus of the next topic, so keep your evidence here centered on export economies and resource extraction.
Common Misconceptions
- Export economies were not only about colonies. Independent regions also specialized in commodity exports, such as guano in Peru and Chile and meat in Argentina and Uruguay.
- "Raw materials" includes more than minerals. Food and industrial crops like cotton, palm oil, and meat are also part of the export economy story.
- Industrialization did not spread evenly. Many export regions stayed locked into producing raw materials while buying finished goods, which limited their own industrial growth.
- Specific companies like De Beers are useful examples, but they are applications of the resource-extraction pattern, not required AP content for this topic.
- This topic is not the same as economic imperialism. Here the emphasis is on how environmental and economic factors built the global economy; the imperialism mechanics come in the following topic.
zes in producing or extracting goods for sale to other regions. In this topic, export economies often supplied raw materials or food to industrialized states.
Why did export economies grow from 1750 to 1900?
Export economies grew because industrial factories needed raw materials and growing urban populations needed food. Those demands pulled more regions into global trade networks.
What are examples of resource export economies?
Examples include cotton in Egypt and South Asia, rubber in the Amazon and Congo basins, palm oil in West Africa, guano in Peru and Chile, meat in Argentina and Uruguay, and diamonds in Africa.
How did environmental factors shape global economic development?
Environmental factors mattered because resources and growing conditions were unevenly distributed. Tropical forests, grasslands, coastal guano deposits, and cotton-growing regions shaped what each area exported.
How should I use AP World 6.4 on FRQs?
Use a specific commodity and explain the cause-and-effect chain. For example, industrial demand for rubber encouraged extraction in tropical regions, which connected those regions more tightly to global trade.
Related AP World History Guides
Vocabulary
The following words are mentioned explicitly in the College Board Course and Exam Description for this topic.Term | Definition |
|---|---|
commercial extraction | The large-scale removal and harvesting of natural resources from the environment for profit and trade. |
cotton production | The cultivation and harvesting of cotton as a commercial crop for export, particularly significant in Egypt during this period. |
environmental factors | Physical and natural conditions such as climate, geography, and natural resources that influence economic development and trade patterns. |
export economies | Economic systems organized around the extraction and sale of natural resources and agricultural products to foreign markets for profit. |
finished goods | Manufactured products that have been processed and are ready for sale to consumers, typically purchased with profits from raw material exports. |
global economy | The interconnected system of economic production, trade, and financial flows that spans across nations and continents. |
guano industries | The commercial extraction and export of guano (bird droppings) from Peru and Chile as a fertilizer and valuable trade commodity. |
palm oil trade | The commercial extraction and export of palm oil from West Africa as a valuable commodity for industrial and consumer use. |
raw materials | Unprocessed natural resources extracted from the environment, such as cotton, rubber, and metals, used as inputs for factory production. |
rubber extraction | The commercial harvesting of rubber from trees in tropical regions, particularly in the Amazon and Congo basin, for export markets. |
Frequently Asked Questions
What is AP World 6.4 about?
AP World 6.4 is about global economic development from 1750 to 1900. It explains how demand for raw materials and food led to export economies around the world.
What is an export economy?
An export economy specializes in producing or extracting goods for sale to other regions. In this topic, export economies often supplied raw materials or food to industrialized states.
Why did export economies grow from 1750 to 1900?
Export economies grew because industrial factories needed raw materials and growing urban populations needed food. Those demands pulled more regions into global trade networks.
What are examples of resource export economies?
Examples include cotton in Egypt and South Asia, rubber in the Amazon and Congo basins, palm oil in West Africa, guano in Peru and Chile, meat in Argentina and Uruguay, and diamonds in Africa.
How did environmental factors shape global economic development?
Environmental factors mattered because resources and growing conditions were unevenly distributed. Tropical forests, grasslands, coastal guano deposits, and cotton-growing regions shaped what each area exported.
How should I use AP World 6.4 on FRQs?
Use a specific commodity and explain the cause-and-effect chain. For example, industrial demand for rubber encouraged extraction in tropical regions, which connected those regions more tightly to global trade.