Bedevilling the ongoing debate about changes in real-incomes in late-medieval western Europe, especially during the so-called ‘Golden Age of the Labourer’, is the very troubling issue of ‘wage-stickiness’. The standard and long-traditional explanation for this supposed ‘Golden Age’ of rising real wages is that sharp fall in population – with the Black Death (from 1348), subsequent waves of bubonic plagues, and other forces for demographic contraction up to the late 15th century – dramatically altered the land:labour ratio in ways that led to a pronounced rise in the marginal productivity of labour, which in turn forced up real wages. This simplistic model assumes (1) that rising real wages in the agrarian sector were transmitted to other...
Classic accounts of the English industrial revolution present a long period of stagnation followed b...
This paper traces the history of prices and wages in European cities from the fourteenth century to ...
This paper studies the apparent inconsistency between the evolution of GDP per capita and real wages...
Bedevilling the ongoing debate about changes in real-incomes in late-medieval western Europe, especi...
The traditional and almost universal method of expressing real wages is by index numbers, according ...
The primary explanation for the marked rise in real wages in both England and Flanders, from the lat...
This comparative study of money, coinages, prices, and wages in southern England and the southern Lo...
This paper re-examines the classic demographic or 'real' model, essentially based on a Malthusian-Ri...
The narrative of the post-Black Death English economy has been shaped by two contrasting interpretat...
The narrative of the post-Black Death English economy has been shaped by two contrasting interpretat...
One of the most common myths in European economic history, and indeed in Economics itself, is that t...
This article introduces a new source for assessing the distribution of wealth in early modern Englan...
Estimates of historical workers' annual incomes suffer from the fundamental problem that they are in...
In this paper, I investigate the “little divergence” of late medieval and early modern Europe, focus...
One important recent theme emerging from the literature on early modern Europe is that some of the k...
Classic accounts of the English industrial revolution present a long period of stagnation followed b...
This paper traces the history of prices and wages in European cities from the fourteenth century to ...
This paper studies the apparent inconsistency between the evolution of GDP per capita and real wages...
Bedevilling the ongoing debate about changes in real-incomes in late-medieval western Europe, especi...
The traditional and almost universal method of expressing real wages is by index numbers, according ...
The primary explanation for the marked rise in real wages in both England and Flanders, from the lat...
This comparative study of money, coinages, prices, and wages in southern England and the southern Lo...
This paper re-examines the classic demographic or 'real' model, essentially based on a Malthusian-Ri...
The narrative of the post-Black Death English economy has been shaped by two contrasting interpretat...
The narrative of the post-Black Death English economy has been shaped by two contrasting interpretat...
One of the most common myths in European economic history, and indeed in Economics itself, is that t...
This article introduces a new source for assessing the distribution of wealth in early modern Englan...
Estimates of historical workers' annual incomes suffer from the fundamental problem that they are in...
In this paper, I investigate the “little divergence” of late medieval and early modern Europe, focus...
One important recent theme emerging from the literature on early modern Europe is that some of the k...
Classic accounts of the English industrial revolution present a long period of stagnation followed b...
This paper traces the history of prices and wages in European cities from the fourteenth century to ...
This paper studies the apparent inconsistency between the evolution of GDP per capita and real wages...