This article presents a dynamic land property rights theory based on the law of the limit to land productivity, and then uses this theory and a large amount of data to compare the history of the agricultural and industrial revolutions in England and China. The article finds that, in England, the arable land-especially sown land-per capita of the agricultural population trended downward before the Black Death, but after the Black Death, experienced a long-term upward trend. In China, however, over the same period, the sown area per capita of the rural population shrank. It is these opposing trends that account for the historical divergence between the economies of England and China. This article concludes that the agricultural and industrial...
Abstract: This paper examines the impact of a property rights reform in rural China that allowed far...
This article presents a method for estimating an annual series of English wheat production in physic...
In the economic transition of the past decades, China has seen remarkable economic growth without ro...
Scholars have long debated how legal institutions influenced the economic development of societies a...
Using a new concept—the law of the limit to land productivity—this article builds a three (physical,...
By comparing the development of landownership in China and England, this paper explores what were be...
The focus of this study is the property rights theories tested in the context of Modern China’s rura...
Historians have long believed that the modern world commenced in Britain in the 1770s with simultane...
There is considerable ferment over property rights in China today. This paper briefly explores impor...
Agriculture, Technics and Social Property Rights in Imperial China Sucheta Mazumdar This paper argu...
[[abstract]]During the Song Dynasty (960—1279), China experienced unprecedented economic growth, wit...
The productivity of agriculture in England and the Yangtze Delta are compared c.1620 and c.1820 in o...
Ministry of Agriculture;Chinese Academy of Sciences KSCX1-YW-09-04 2009S1-37;World Bank;Internatio...
Many people still think that imperial China was a despotic state, where peasants had no private prop...
agriculture stagnated for centuries in pre-industrial China. This is usually considered to be in sha...
Abstract: This paper examines the impact of a property rights reform in rural China that allowed far...
This article presents a method for estimating an annual series of English wheat production in physic...
In the economic transition of the past decades, China has seen remarkable economic growth without ro...
Scholars have long debated how legal institutions influenced the economic development of societies a...
Using a new concept—the law of the limit to land productivity—this article builds a three (physical,...
By comparing the development of landownership in China and England, this paper explores what were be...
The focus of this study is the property rights theories tested in the context of Modern China’s rura...
Historians have long believed that the modern world commenced in Britain in the 1770s with simultane...
There is considerable ferment over property rights in China today. This paper briefly explores impor...
Agriculture, Technics and Social Property Rights in Imperial China Sucheta Mazumdar This paper argu...
[[abstract]]During the Song Dynasty (960—1279), China experienced unprecedented economic growth, wit...
The productivity of agriculture in England and the Yangtze Delta are compared c.1620 and c.1820 in o...
Ministry of Agriculture;Chinese Academy of Sciences KSCX1-YW-09-04 2009S1-37;World Bank;Internatio...
Many people still think that imperial China was a despotic state, where peasants had no private prop...
agriculture stagnated for centuries in pre-industrial China. This is usually considered to be in sha...
Abstract: This paper examines the impact of a property rights reform in rural China that allowed far...
This article presents a method for estimating an annual series of English wheat production in physic...
In the economic transition of the past decades, China has seen remarkable economic growth without ro...