A key challenge to theories of long-run economic growth has been linking the onset of modern growth with the move to modern fertility limitation. A notable puzzle for these theories is that modern growth in England began around 1780, 100 years before there was seemingly any movement to limit fertility. Here we show that the aggregate data on fertility in England before 1880 conceals significant declines in the fertility of the middle and upper classes earlier. These declines coincide with the Industrial Revolution and are of the character predicted by some recent theories of long-run growth
This chapter argues that, in spite of slow economic growth, the Industrial Revolution was a period i...
We use data collected by the Cambridge Group to investigate and explain differences in fertility by ...
Exploiting a genealogy of English individuals living in the 16th to the 19th centuries, this study s...
A key challenge to theories of long-run economic growth has been linking the onset of modern growth ...
The Industrial Revolution seemingly involved two profound changes separated by 120 years: the classi...
English fertility history is generally regarded as having been composed of two re-gimes: an era of u...
Fundamental to the Malthusian model of pre-industrial society is the assumption that higher income i...
In the process of economic development economies grow through various regimes, each characterized by...
This paper uses a variety of time-series methods and a new real wage series from [Clark, G., 2005. T...
Economic growth, understood as an increase in the gross domestic product over a long period of time,...
The paper outlines the Malthusian theory of income determination in pre-industrial society, and asks...
Malthus believed that rising real wages encouraged earlier marriage, higher fertility and a growing ...
What were income trends before the Industrial Revolution? Clark (2007b) argued on both theoretical ...
Although Unified Growth Theory presumes the existence of the Maltusian mechanism in pre-industrial E...
This paper shows that the interaction between economic and demographic variables in England before t...
This chapter argues that, in spite of slow economic growth, the Industrial Revolution was a period i...
We use data collected by the Cambridge Group to investigate and explain differences in fertility by ...
Exploiting a genealogy of English individuals living in the 16th to the 19th centuries, this study s...
A key challenge to theories of long-run economic growth has been linking the onset of modern growth ...
The Industrial Revolution seemingly involved two profound changes separated by 120 years: the classi...
English fertility history is generally regarded as having been composed of two re-gimes: an era of u...
Fundamental to the Malthusian model of pre-industrial society is the assumption that higher income i...
In the process of economic development economies grow through various regimes, each characterized by...
This paper uses a variety of time-series methods and a new real wage series from [Clark, G., 2005. T...
Economic growth, understood as an increase in the gross domestic product over a long period of time,...
The paper outlines the Malthusian theory of income determination in pre-industrial society, and asks...
Malthus believed that rising real wages encouraged earlier marriage, higher fertility and a growing ...
What were income trends before the Industrial Revolution? Clark (2007b) argued on both theoretical ...
Although Unified Growth Theory presumes the existence of the Maltusian mechanism in pre-industrial E...
This paper shows that the interaction between economic and demographic variables in England before t...
This chapter argues that, in spite of slow economic growth, the Industrial Revolution was a period i...
We use data collected by the Cambridge Group to investigate and explain differences in fertility by ...
Exploiting a genealogy of English individuals living in the 16th to the 19th centuries, this study s...