Our article on ‘Late marriage as a contributor to the industrial revolution in England’ is intended to show that the evidence is consistent with the European marriage pattern being a major influence on long‐run English economic development, through the accumulation of human capital, broadly defined. Edwards and Ogilvie assert that our approach is inadequate because, they claim, we consider neither other influences on English industrialization, such as non‐familial institutions, nor other European economies where marriage age was high throughout the early modern period but where industrialization came later. We do allow for other influences on English industrialization in our model, and the observation that some late industrializers had late...
This paper uses a linked sample of between 67,000 and 160,000 father-son pairs in 1851-1911 to provi...
Economic models of the Industrial Revolution increasingly emphasize the key role of human capital in...
In this paper, I address the U-shaped dynamics (a decrease followed by an increase) in the age at fi...
Was the European Marriage Pattern an important contributor to England’s precocious economic developm...
Foreman-Peck and Zhou’s claim that late marriage was a major contributor to the Industrial Revolutio...
For several centuries, women’s age at first marriage in Western Europe was higher than in the east (...
The original article can be found at: http://www3.interscience.wiley.com Copyright Economic History ...
We construct a Dynamic Stochastic General Equilibrium model of the interaction between demography an...
This article scrutinizes the recently postulated link between the European Marriage Pattern (EMP) a...
Using a new database of 1.7 million marriage records for England 1837-2021 we estimate assortment by...
Using a new database of 1.7 million marriage records for England 1837-2021 we estimate assortment by...
Why was England first? And why Europe? We present a probabilistic model that builds on big-push mode...
that builds on big-push models by Murphy, Shleifer and Vishny (1989), combined with hierarchical pre...
This article evaluates criticisms by Sarah G. Carmichael, Alexandra de Pleijt, Jan Luiten van Zanden...
This article scrutinizes the recently postulated link between the European Marriage Pattern (EMP) an...
This paper uses a linked sample of between 67,000 and 160,000 father-son pairs in 1851-1911 to provi...
Economic models of the Industrial Revolution increasingly emphasize the key role of human capital in...
In this paper, I address the U-shaped dynamics (a decrease followed by an increase) in the age at fi...
Was the European Marriage Pattern an important contributor to England’s precocious economic developm...
Foreman-Peck and Zhou’s claim that late marriage was a major contributor to the Industrial Revolutio...
For several centuries, women’s age at first marriage in Western Europe was higher than in the east (...
The original article can be found at: http://www3.interscience.wiley.com Copyright Economic History ...
We construct a Dynamic Stochastic General Equilibrium model of the interaction between demography an...
This article scrutinizes the recently postulated link between the European Marriage Pattern (EMP) a...
Using a new database of 1.7 million marriage records for England 1837-2021 we estimate assortment by...
Using a new database of 1.7 million marriage records for England 1837-2021 we estimate assortment by...
Why was England first? And why Europe? We present a probabilistic model that builds on big-push mode...
that builds on big-push models by Murphy, Shleifer and Vishny (1989), combined with hierarchical pre...
This article evaluates criticisms by Sarah G. Carmichael, Alexandra de Pleijt, Jan Luiten van Zanden...
This article scrutinizes the recently postulated link between the European Marriage Pattern (EMP) an...
This paper uses a linked sample of between 67,000 and 160,000 father-son pairs in 1851-1911 to provi...
Economic models of the Industrial Revolution increasingly emphasize the key role of human capital in...
In this paper, I address the U-shaped dynamics (a decrease followed by an increase) in the age at fi...