As a result of recent advances in historical national accounting, estimates of GDP per capita are now available for a number of European economies back to the medieval period, including Britain, the Netherlands, Italy, and Spain. The approach has also been extended to Asian economies, including India and Japan. So far, however, China, which has been at the center of the Great Divergence debate, has been absent from this approach. This article adds China to the picture, showing that the Great Divergence began earlier than originally suggested by the California School, but later than implied by older Eurocentric writers
This dissertation examines the economic growth process of the Yangzi Delta, one of China’s most deve...
China's long-term economic dynamics pose a formidable challenge to economic historians. The Qing Emp...
China's long-term economic dynamics pose a formidable challenge to economic historians. The Qing Emp...
Chinese GDP per capita fluctuated at a high level during the Northern Song and Ming dynasties before...
Recent work in historical national accounting is surveyed, focusing on the Industrial Revolution and...
27 November 2018Despite being the first Asian economy to achieve modern economic growth, Japan has r...
Pomeranz\u27s study The Great Divergence is a major contribution in historical social science inso...
By offering a particular interpretation of the new evidence on historical national accounting, Golds...
Despite being the first Asian economy to achieve modern economic growth, Japan has received relative...
Why did sustained industrialization and modern economic growth first take off in western Europe and ...
This paper addresses two important topics in recent economic historiography: globalization and the g...
We examine regional variation in Chinese GDP per head for five benchmark years from the Song dynasty...
Prevailing approaches in historical studies have been dominated by a macro view and placed an overwh...
This article uses expenditure-based purchasing power parities (PPPs) to estimateGDP per capita in co...
We construct 1912/18 Chinese provincial gross domestic product per capita from primary sources and p...
This dissertation examines the economic growth process of the Yangzi Delta, one of China’s most deve...
China's long-term economic dynamics pose a formidable challenge to economic historians. The Qing Emp...
China's long-term economic dynamics pose a formidable challenge to economic historians. The Qing Emp...
Chinese GDP per capita fluctuated at a high level during the Northern Song and Ming dynasties before...
Recent work in historical national accounting is surveyed, focusing on the Industrial Revolution and...
27 November 2018Despite being the first Asian economy to achieve modern economic growth, Japan has r...
Pomeranz\u27s study The Great Divergence is a major contribution in historical social science inso...
By offering a particular interpretation of the new evidence on historical national accounting, Golds...
Despite being the first Asian economy to achieve modern economic growth, Japan has received relative...
Why did sustained industrialization and modern economic growth first take off in western Europe and ...
This paper addresses two important topics in recent economic historiography: globalization and the g...
We examine regional variation in Chinese GDP per head for five benchmark years from the Song dynasty...
Prevailing approaches in historical studies have been dominated by a macro view and placed an overwh...
This article uses expenditure-based purchasing power parities (PPPs) to estimateGDP per capita in co...
We construct 1912/18 Chinese provincial gross domestic product per capita from primary sources and p...
This dissertation examines the economic growth process of the Yangzi Delta, one of China’s most deve...
China's long-term economic dynamics pose a formidable challenge to economic historians. The Qing Emp...
China's long-term economic dynamics pose a formidable challenge to economic historians. The Qing Emp...