© 2017 Elsevier B.V. This study first draws on a unique data set, hojok (household registers), to estimate numeracy levels in Korea from the period 1550–1630. We add evidence from Japan and China from the early modern period until 1800 to obtain human capital estimates for East Asia. We find that numeracy was high by global standards, even considering the potential sources of upward bias inherent in the data. Therefore, the unusually high level of numeracy in East Asia in the early 21st century was already present in the early modern period, with implications for our understanding of Asian growth processes
The present dissertation discusses the appropriateness of using the age-heaping method as a measure ...
At the beginning of the Edo period (1600-1868 CE) the Japanese Tokugawa shōgunate enforced the famou...
Theories of modern economic growth assume the income and technological shocks of the industrial revo...
This paper draws on a unique data set, hojok (household registers), to estimate numeracy levels in K...
How much war was there in early modern East Asia? This article empirically corroborates characteriza...
Age heaping is widely employed as an indicator of human capital, more specifically of numeracy. We r...
Does the shift from subsistence agriculture to a specialization in cash-crop production affect human...
Age data frequently display excess frequencies at round or attractive ages, such as even numbers and...
Age data frequently display excess frequencies at round or attractive ages, such as even numbers and...
This article presents new evidence and analysis on age heaping -a proxy for numeracy and therefore f...
This article mobilizes and integrates both existing and new time series data on real wages, physical...
New evidence from Flanders and the Netherlands demonstrates that age heaping was gradually diminishi...
Historical evidence of numeracy on the African continent since the 18th century is presented for the...
[[abstract]]In Europe there were various number-words such as back-counting, over-counting and half-...
Evidence of conventional human capital indicators (e.g. literacy, educational attainment, years of s...
The present dissertation discusses the appropriateness of using the age-heaping method as a measure ...
At the beginning of the Edo period (1600-1868 CE) the Japanese Tokugawa shōgunate enforced the famou...
Theories of modern economic growth assume the income and technological shocks of the industrial revo...
This paper draws on a unique data set, hojok (household registers), to estimate numeracy levels in K...
How much war was there in early modern East Asia? This article empirically corroborates characteriza...
Age heaping is widely employed as an indicator of human capital, more specifically of numeracy. We r...
Does the shift from subsistence agriculture to a specialization in cash-crop production affect human...
Age data frequently display excess frequencies at round or attractive ages, such as even numbers and...
Age data frequently display excess frequencies at round or attractive ages, such as even numbers and...
This article presents new evidence and analysis on age heaping -a proxy for numeracy and therefore f...
This article mobilizes and integrates both existing and new time series data on real wages, physical...
New evidence from Flanders and the Netherlands demonstrates that age heaping was gradually diminishi...
Historical evidence of numeracy on the African continent since the 18th century is presented for the...
[[abstract]]In Europe there were various number-words such as back-counting, over-counting and half-...
Evidence of conventional human capital indicators (e.g. literacy, educational attainment, years of s...
The present dissertation discusses the appropriateness of using the age-heaping method as a measure ...
At the beginning of the Edo period (1600-1868 CE) the Japanese Tokugawa shōgunate enforced the famou...
Theories of modern economic growth assume the income and technological shocks of the industrial revo...