Alex MacMillan

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The extent of Scottish experience abroad was historically driven by three main factors: Scotland’s relative overproduction of educated men and the inability of the country to offer scope for their ambition; the impossibility of expanding territorially because of a disproportionately powerful neighbour; and the country’s economy, which not only lacked bullion and required foreign currency to maintain monetary circulation, but also stood in need of a proactive trade policy.
Scotland: The Global History: 1603 to the Present
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