Abstract: By documenting the legislative history of the Corn Laws from 1670 and using previously unused data to calculate annual Ad Valorem Equivalents for most years from 1814, it is possible to establish several important facts about British wheat protection. Statutory protection was only significant for a few years after 1815, the decline starting in the 1820s and continuing beyond the famous “repeal ” in 1846. The level of protection prior to 1846 was, for many years, much lower than previous accounts have suggested. The annual time series of Ad Valorem Equivalents will allow for UK trade policy to play the important role it deserves in econometric analyses of the nineteenth century
New annual series for the prices of major agricultural commodities sold in London markets between 17...
The Malthusian "preventive check" mechanism has been well documented for pre-industrial England thro...
This paper shows the relevance of the strong and changing presence of the so-called fiscal products ...
This article presents a method for estimating an annual series of English wheat production in physic...
Harnessing previously unused farm inventories and corn books, we provide data on wheat storage and s...
Corn Laws Great Britainimport tariffsClassification and regression treesGreat Britain politics and g...
Duties on wheat were the mainstay of trade policy in Europe in the first half of the nineteenth cent...
We take up again the famous case of the trade in wheat between the United States and the United King...
<p>Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.</p>The data were gathered...
Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.The period of the study was c...
From 1770 to 1914, the British Government collected weekly price and quantity data for all types of ...
For some commodities and time periods, the analysis of price fluctuations must necessarily rely on t...
Interpretation of historic grain price data may be hazardous owing to systematic grain quality vari...
Economic interests, the influence of economic ideas and politics have been put forward in the litera...
Although the statistical movement has been a well-rehearsed part of Victorian historiography, econom...
New annual series for the prices of major agricultural commodities sold in London markets between 17...
The Malthusian "preventive check" mechanism has been well documented for pre-industrial England thro...
This paper shows the relevance of the strong and changing presence of the so-called fiscal products ...
This article presents a method for estimating an annual series of English wheat production in physic...
Harnessing previously unused farm inventories and corn books, we provide data on wheat storage and s...
Corn Laws Great Britainimport tariffsClassification and regression treesGreat Britain politics and g...
Duties on wheat were the mainstay of trade policy in Europe in the first half of the nineteenth cent...
We take up again the famous case of the trade in wheat between the United States and the United King...
<p>Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.</p>The data were gathered...
Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.The period of the study was c...
From 1770 to 1914, the British Government collected weekly price and quantity data for all types of ...
For some commodities and time periods, the analysis of price fluctuations must necessarily rely on t...
Interpretation of historic grain price data may be hazardous owing to systematic grain quality vari...
Economic interests, the influence of economic ideas and politics have been put forward in the litera...
Although the statistical movement has been a well-rehearsed part of Victorian historiography, econom...
New annual series for the prices of major agricultural commodities sold in London markets between 17...
The Malthusian "preventive check" mechanism has been well documented for pre-industrial England thro...
This paper shows the relevance of the strong and changing presence of the so-called fiscal products ...