Well even if that's true, it doesn't negate the other aspects of the collapse we've discussed, nor does it prove industrialization improves literacy, education, women's rights, etc. Where I'm from completely disproves those notions. (Kerala)
Now, back to this point, and James Burke, who you really need to get more familiar with:
Industrialisation and modern agriculture means that you need less people on the farm. The people who don't need to work growing food are available for other jobs. This
intrinsically means that your civilisation becomes more prosperous.
The new industries and businesses that arise are more complex than farming, and require a larger body of skilled workers - engineers and bookkeepers to begin with, and more and more specialised and highly trained roles as time goes on.
That means that you need more education; it's not a matter of being enlightened as to the value of the liberal arts, it's just that businesses need these people to keep operating, and are willing to pay them - and for the employee, it means you're not mucking out the pigs at 4AM or working at the coal face 15 hours a day. Everyone wins.
Once you have industrialisation, improved education and literacy become a necessity.
Women's rights took longer for a number of reasons, partly because the sheer labour involved in maintaning a home before modern appliances and modern groceries was so high. (And partly because men are jerks.) Industrialisation was one of the key factors still; another was the two World Wars, particularly the second; Western social standards shifted dramatically during and after both WWI and WWII. With so many men away dying in the mud in France, women were needed to maintain the workforce back home, and the genie could not be pushed back into the bottle afterwards.
(This is also what led to
film noir, and why it is essentially a cycle rather than a genre - changing attitudes in the 1950s erased the tension upon which
noir was based.)
Kerala in no way disproves any of this. India is a modern industrialised nation, and Kerala draws on all of that directly as well as the history of other countries that industrialised earlier.