Rising inequality in recent decades in the U.S. and other developed economies has again focused attention on the relationship between inequality and growth, and the relationship between inequality and heterogeneity in abilities. This paper is a preliminary report based on the analysis of data extracted from the tax returns (the taille) imposed by Philip the Fair from 1292 to 1313 on the Parisian middle class. The major finding reported in this paper is that inequality in Paris in the heyday of the Commercial Revolution was very high – a Gini coefficient of 0.7. The medieval Gini coefficient is larger than values recorded for Latin American. Inequality was general and was not confined to one sector or the other. As theory would predict, this...
Is inequality largely the result of the Industrial Revolution? Or, were pre-industrial incomes and l...
In Modern societies, when per capita income is high, ine-quality is relatively low and vice versa. I...
Is inequality largely the result of the Industrial Revolution? Or, were pre-industrial incomes as un...
Recent research suggests that inequality increased almost continuously from the Middle Ages until th...
Recent literature has reconstructed estimates of wealth and income inequality for a range of preindu...
This article studies a collection of data on economic inequality in fifteen towns in the Southern an...
Information about the income distribution in pre-industrial societies is sparse. We analyze labor in...
Income inequalities in France from the early eighteenth century to 1985. This study analyzes the e...
The study of economic inequality in preindustrial economies has received recent attention by economi...
Using the newly expanded set of 40 social tables from pre-modern societies, the paper tries to find ...
This chapter addresses income inequality by offering new evidence based on the Ensenada Cadastre, a ...
This chapter addresses income inequality by offering new evidence based on the Ensenada Cadastre, a ...
Using large samples of estate tax returns, we construct new series on wealth concentration in Paris ...
Using large samples of estate tax returns, we construct new series on wealth concentration in Paris ...
In Modern societies, when per capita income is high, inequality is relatively low and vice versa. In...
Is inequality largely the result of the Industrial Revolution? Or, were pre-industrial incomes and l...
In Modern societies, when per capita income is high, ine-quality is relatively low and vice versa. I...
Is inequality largely the result of the Industrial Revolution? Or, were pre-industrial incomes as un...
Recent research suggests that inequality increased almost continuously from the Middle Ages until th...
Recent literature has reconstructed estimates of wealth and income inequality for a range of preindu...
This article studies a collection of data on economic inequality in fifteen towns in the Southern an...
Information about the income distribution in pre-industrial societies is sparse. We analyze labor in...
Income inequalities in France from the early eighteenth century to 1985. This study analyzes the e...
The study of economic inequality in preindustrial economies has received recent attention by economi...
Using the newly expanded set of 40 social tables from pre-modern societies, the paper tries to find ...
This chapter addresses income inequality by offering new evidence based on the Ensenada Cadastre, a ...
This chapter addresses income inequality by offering new evidence based on the Ensenada Cadastre, a ...
Using large samples of estate tax returns, we construct new series on wealth concentration in Paris ...
Using large samples of estate tax returns, we construct new series on wealth concentration in Paris ...
In Modern societies, when per capita income is high, inequality is relatively low and vice versa. In...
Is inequality largely the result of the Industrial Revolution? Or, were pre-industrial incomes and l...
In Modern societies, when per capita income is high, ine-quality is relatively low and vice versa. I...
Is inequality largely the result of the Industrial Revolution? Or, were pre-industrial incomes as un...