340 THE BRITISH APPROACH TO POLITICS regarded the settlements in the New World as valuable markets for English doth, and as sources of supply of raw materials. 'The same deske for trade led many European powers to establish outposts along the African route to India, and in India itself; .thence came also a supply of luxury goods. For more than two hundred years. Imperial Powers tried to monopolise the markets and supplies of their possessions, and the English "mercantile system" was a mass of import and export restrictions, which became increasingly complicated as now one, and now another industry succeeded in influencing policy. But while certain sections benefited, the fir>3l effect was to check enterprise, and the colonists suffered because they could not buy and sell as they pleased; indignation on this account was one cause of the loss of the American Colonies. Adam Smith's Wealth of Nations presented a powerful case against trade restriction, and his arguments gained all the more weight when Britain, having anticipated other nations in the application of power to industry, found herself anxious for wider markets;, in which she could meet competition with ease. In the nineteenth century, world-wide mechanisation of industry stimulated the growth of Empires. Britain's competitive advantage impelled other nations to bring territory under their control, and reserve its markets for themselves. The development of industry by those nations, made Britain doubtful of her Free Trade policy. Meanwhile, the increase of production and of large fortunes intensified the search for markets and supplies, and for lands with undeveloped resources, where capital might profitably be invested, India, Africa and Australia, only the fringes of which had been touched in the eighteenth century, were extensively developed; Germany and Italy which had only recently become great Powers, and, beyond Europe, the United States and Japan, joined in the search. Imperial rivalry threatened the peace of the world, and each Power became more anxious to have under its political control the materials necessary for war. From these* facts arose the theory of Imperialism, The motive