This paper describes a two-sector demo-economic model (agricultural and non-agricultural sectors) applied to Europe and spanning the period from the neolithic agricultural revolution to the Industrial Revolution. The model describes the "incessant contest" between population growth and food production. As long as per capita agricultural output is above a critical minimum, the population is assumed to grow at a constant rate. When this output drops below the minimum, the population is subjected to random mortality "shocks" which lower the population until the production grows above the minimum. Society is thus in a "Malthusian trap". The average magnitude of the mortality crises is assumed to decrease as capital increases, which captures a...
We adopt an imagined exchequer, the functionary responsible in an early polity for securing resource...
We adopt an imagined exchequer, the functionary responsible in an early polity for securing resource...
International audienceTowards a different model of agricultural development? At the end of the 1970s...
This paper describes a two-sector demo-economic model (agricultural and non-agricultural sectors) ap...
This paper describes a two-sector demo-economic model (agricultural and non-agricultural sectors) ap...
This paper describes a two-sector demo-economic model (agricultural and non-agricultural sectors) ap...
This paper describes a two-sector demo-economic model (agricultural and non-agricultural sectors) ap...
Abstract This article proposes a model of the development of traditional economics. This model is "m...
Abstract This article proposes a model of the development of traditional economics. This model is "m...
Industrialization allowed the industrialized world of today to escape from the Malthusian regime cha...
A general equilibrium model of structural change featuring three sectors (agriculture, manufacturing...
The model of farm development of the last thirty years has recently been questioned in the present c...
This paper develops a two-sector model that illuminates the role of agricultural modern-ization in t...
We consider a demoeconomic model where output is produced using physical capital, human capital and ...
We adopt an imagined exchequer, the functionary responsible in an early polity for securing resource...
We adopt an imagined exchequer, the functionary responsible in an early polity for securing resource...
We adopt an imagined exchequer, the functionary responsible in an early polity for securing resource...
International audienceTowards a different model of agricultural development? At the end of the 1970s...
This paper describes a two-sector demo-economic model (agricultural and non-agricultural sectors) ap...
This paper describes a two-sector demo-economic model (agricultural and non-agricultural sectors) ap...
This paper describes a two-sector demo-economic model (agricultural and non-agricultural sectors) ap...
This paper describes a two-sector demo-economic model (agricultural and non-agricultural sectors) ap...
Abstract This article proposes a model of the development of traditional economics. This model is "m...
Abstract This article proposes a model of the development of traditional economics. This model is "m...
Industrialization allowed the industrialized world of today to escape from the Malthusian regime cha...
A general equilibrium model of structural change featuring three sectors (agriculture, manufacturing...
The model of farm development of the last thirty years has recently been questioned in the present c...
This paper develops a two-sector model that illuminates the role of agricultural modern-ization in t...
We consider a demoeconomic model where output is produced using physical capital, human capital and ...
We adopt an imagined exchequer, the functionary responsible in an early polity for securing resource...
We adopt an imagined exchequer, the functionary responsible in an early polity for securing resource...
We adopt an imagined exchequer, the functionary responsible in an early polity for securing resource...
International audienceTowards a different model of agricultural development? At the end of the 1970s...