Some scholars maintain that pre-industrial England was held in a Malthusian ‘trap’, and that this trap prevented the sustained growth of real wages until as late as 1800. Opponents to this view argue that the structural transformations occurring in preindustrial England – urbanization, labour reallocation between sectors, and human capital investments – are features of development that are incompatible with the idea of Malthusian stagnation. These opponents also reject the idea that Malthusian forces drove English wage rates down to a biological minimum. The contest between the Malthusian and anti-Malthusian views is one of the key themes addressed in the present dissertation. Are the anti-Malthusian views entirely at odds with the idea of ...
A unified growth theory is developed that accounts for the roughly constant living standards display...
A key challenge to theories of long-run economic growth has been linking the onset of modern growth ...
This paper argues that Malthusian regimes are capable of sustained changes in per capita incomes. Sh...
Some scholars maintain that pre-industrial England was held in a Malthusian ‘trap’, and that this tr...
This paper uses a variety of time-series methods and a new real wage series from [Clark, G., 2005. T...
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 paper examines the historical evolution of the relationship among population growth, technologi...
Recent empirical research has questioned the validity of using Malthusian theory in pre-industrial ...
What were income trends before the Industrial Revolution? Clark (2007b) argued on both theoretical ...
Living standards were constant for thousands of years before the industrial revolution. Malthus expl...
This paper empirically tests the predictions of the Malthusian theory with respect to both populatio...
In the process of economic development economies grow through various regimes, each characterized by...
Although Unified Growth Theory presumes the existence of the Maltusian mechanism in pre-industrial E...
The paper outlines the Malthusian theory of income determination in pre-industrial society, and asks...
A unified growth theory is developed that accounts for the roughly constant living standards display...
A key challenge to theories of long-run economic growth has been linking the onset of modern growth ...
This paper argues that Malthusian regimes are capable of sustained changes in per capita incomes. Sh...
Some scholars maintain that pre-industrial England was held in a Malthusian ‘trap’, and that this tr...
This paper uses a variety of time-series methods and a new real wage series from [Clark, G., 2005. T...
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 paper examines the historical evolution of the relationship among population growth, technologi...
Recent empirical research has questioned the validity of using Malthusian theory in pre-industrial ...
What were income trends before the Industrial Revolution? Clark (2007b) argued on both theoretical ...
Living standards were constant for thousands of years before the industrial revolution. Malthus expl...
This paper empirically tests the predictions of the Malthusian theory with respect to both populatio...
In the process of economic development economies grow through various regimes, each characterized by...
Although Unified Growth Theory presumes the existence of the Maltusian mechanism in pre-industrial E...
The paper outlines the Malthusian theory of income determination in pre-industrial society, and asks...
A unified growth theory is developed that accounts for the roughly constant living standards display...
A key challenge to theories of long-run economic growth has been linking the onset of modern growth ...
This paper argues that Malthusian regimes are capable of sustained changes in per capita incomes. Sh...