207 research outputs found
Recent developments in the theory of very long run growth : a historical appraisal
This paper offers a historical appraisal of recent developments in the theory
of very long run growth, focusing on two main areas: (1) linkages between wages,
population and human capital and (2) interactions between institutions, markets and
technology. Historians as well as economists have recently begun to break away from
the traditional practice of using different methods to analyse the world before and
after the industrial revolution. However, tensions remain between the theoretical and
historical literatures, particularly over the unit of analysis (the world or particular
countries) and the role of historical contingency
Accounting for the great divergence
This paper âaccountsâ for the Great Divergence between Europe and Asia in two
ways. In the sense of measurement: (1) the traditional view, in which the Great Divergence
had late medieval origins and was already well under way during the early modern period, is
confirmed (2) However, revisionists are correct to point to regional variation within both
continents (3) There was a Little Divergence within Europe, with a reversal of fortunes
between the North Sea Area and Mediterranean Europe. (4) There was a Little Divergence
within Asia, with Japan overtaking China and India. However, Japan started at a lower level
of per capita income than the North Sea Area and grew at a slower rate, so continued to fall
behind until after the Meiji Restoration of 1868. Any explanation needs to be able to account
for the Little Divergences within Europe and Asia as well as the Great Divergence between
the two continents. The divergences arose from the differential impact of shocks hitting
economies with different structural features. The structural factors include: (1) The large
share of pastoral farming in agriculture which helped to put the North Sea Area on the path to
high-value-added, capital-intensive, non-human-energy intensive production. (2) Late
marriage in the North Sea Area, which lowered fertility and encouraged human capital
formation (3) Labour supply, with an industrious revolution helping to explain the Little
Divergences within both Asia and Europe (4) Institutions, with the role of the state helping to
explain the success of the North Sea Area. The two key shocks were (1) The Black Death,
which led to a permanent per capita income gain in the North Sea Area, but not in the rest of
Eurasia (2) The new trade routes which opened up from Europe to Asia and the Americas
around 1500
Indian GDP, 1600-1871 : some preliminary estimates and a comparison with Britain.
This paper provides estimates of Indian GDP constructed from the output side for the period 1600-1871, and combines them with population estimates to track changes in living standards. Indian per capita GDP declined steadily. As British living standards increased from the mid-seventeenth century, India fell increasingly behind. Whereas in 1650, Indian per capita GDP was more than 80 per cent of the British level, by 1871 it had fallen to less than 15 per cent. As well as placing the origins of
the Great Divergence firmly in the early modern period, these estimates suggest a relatively prosperous India at the height of the Mughal Empire, with living standards well above bare bones subsistence
British economic growth and the business cycle, 1700-1870 : annual estimates
This paper provides the first annual GDP series for Great Britain over the
period 1700-1870. The series is constructed in real terms from the output side, using
volume indicators and value added weights. Sectoral estimates are provided for
agriculture, industry and services, and for a number of sub-sectors. Estimates of
nominal GDP are also provided, based on a benchmark for 1841 and projected back to
1700 and forward to 1870 using the real output series and sectoral price indices. The
new data are used to provide a consistent account of economic growth and the
business cycle. The results are broadly consistent with the long run path of real output
suggested by Crafts and Harley, although growth rates for sub-periods differ, largely
as a result of changes in the growth of agriculture. Nominal GDP increased more
rapidly than suggested by Lindert and Williamson during the eighteenth century, and
more slowly than suggested by Deane and Cole during the first half of the nineteenth
century, as a result of differences in the price indices. We also refine the business
cycle chronologies of Ashton and Gayer, Rostow and Schwartz
Africa's growth prospects in a European mirror : a historical perspective
Drawing on recent quantitative research on Europe reaching back to the
medieval period, and noting a relationship between the quality of institutions and
economic growth, this paper offers a reassessment of Africaâs growth prospects.
Periods of positive growth driven by trade, followed by growth reversals which wiped
out the gains of the previous boom, characterized pre-modern Europe as well as
twentieth century Africa. Since per capita incomes in much of sub-Saharan Africa are
currently at the level of medieval Europe, which did not make the breakthrough to
modern economic growth until the nineteenth century, we caution against too
optimistic a reading of Africaâs recent growth experience. Without the institutional
changes necessary to facilitate structural change, growth reversals continue to pose a
serious threat to African prosperity. Only if growth continues after a downturn in
Africaâs terms of trade can we be sure that the corner has been turned
A sectoral analysis of Italy's development : 1861 -2010
Italyâs economic growth over its 150 years of unified history did not occur at a steady pace nor was it
balanced across sectors. Relying on an entirely new input (labour and capital) database by us built
and presented in the Appendix, together with new Banca dâItalia estimates of GDP by sector, this
paper evaluates the different labour productivity growth trends within the Italian economyâs sectors,
as well as the contribution of structural change to productivity growth. Italyâs performance is then set
in an international context: a comparison of sectoral labour productivity growth rates and levels
within a selected sample of countries (UK, US, Germany, Japan, India) allows us to better time,
quantify and gauge the causes of Italyâs catching-up process and subsequent more recent slowdown.
Finally, the paper analyses the proximate sources of Italyâs growth, relative to the other countries, in
a standard growth accounting framework, in an attempt also to disentangle the contribution of both
total factor productivity growth and capital deepening to the countryâs labour productivity dynamics
Recent developments in the theory of very long run growth: a historical appraisal
This paper offers a historical appraisal of recent developments in the theory of very long run growth, focusing on three main areas: (1) linkages between wages, population and human capital (2) interactions between institutions, markets and technology and (3) sustaining the process of economic growth once it has started. Historians as well as economists have recently begun to break away from the traditional practice of using different methods to analyse the world before and after the industrial revolution. However, tensions remain between the theoretical and historical literatures, particularly over the unit of analysis (the world or particular countries) and the role of historical contingency
The historical roots of Indiaâs service-led development: a sectoral analysis of Anglo-Indian productivity differences, 1870-2000
Overall labour productivity in India was already only around 15 per cent of the UK level between the early 1870s and the late 1920s. Between 1929 and 1950 India fell further behind and remained at around 10 per cent of the UK level until the 1970s. India has been catching-up since the 1970s, but by the end of the twentieth century was still further behind than in the late nineteenth century. Agriculture has played an important role in Indiaâs relative decline to 1950 and subsequent delay in catching up, since comparative India/UK labour productivity in this sector has declined continuously and agriculture still accounts for around two-thirds of employment in India. Comparative India/UK labour productivity in industry has fluctuated around a level of around 15 per cent. The only sector to exhibit trend improvement in comparative India/UK labour productivity over the long run is services, rising from around 15 per cent to around 30%. Indiaâs recent emergence as a dynamic service-led economy appears to have long historical roots
English economic growth, 1270-1700
We provide annual estimates of GDP for England over the period 1270-1700,
constructed from the output side. The GDP data are combined with population estimates
to calculate GDP per capita. Sectoral price data and estimates of nominal GDP are also
provided. We find per capita income growth of 0.20 per cent per annum, although growth
was episodic, with the strongest growth after the Black Death and in the second half of
the seventeenth century. Living standards in the late medieval period were well above
âbare bones subsistenceâ, although levels of kilocalorie consumption per head were
modest because of the very large share of pastoral production in agriculture
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