This paper attempts to estimate trends in the levels of economic surplus, public and private investment, and national government surpluses and deficits from accumulated capital income, taxation, and rents estimated by different economic historians for England and the UK. The data support historical accounts that income per capita growth begins to increase around the 1600s in Britain perhaps due to the level of capital, tax, and land income achieving an adequate threshold amount. According to some historians, this would also be about the time of capitalism’s ascent as the dominant economic system in England. Even then, dramatic increases in investment and economic growth do not appear until the late 18th Century when investment and defici...
The paper reviews the macroeconomic data describing the British economy during the industrial revolu...
Classic accounts of the English industrial revolution present a long period of stagnation followed b...
This article introduces a new source for assessing the distribution of wealth in early modern Englan...
Investment in capital, new technology, and agricultural techniques has not been considered an endeav...
When it comes to the British Industrial Revolution of the 18th Century, much of the mainstream econo...
Investment in capital, new technology, and agricultural techniques has not been considered an endeav...
When it comes to the British Industrial Revolution of the 18th Century, much of the mainstream econo...
We provide annual estimates of GDP for England over the period 1270-1700, constructed from the outp...
We provide annual estimates of GDP for England between 1270 and 1700 and for Great Britain between 1...
notes: Preprint to be published in Economic History Review; submitted following guidelines outlined ...
Geographically limited with a small population and few resources, how did England achieve great powe...
In his book, the Political Economy of Growth (1957), and in an article he wrote several years earlie...
We provide annual estimates of GDP for England between 1270 and 1700 and for Great Britain between 1...
We thank the Leverhulme Trust for funding this research under the project ‘History and the Future’.E...
Economic historians conventionally date the origins of the English fiscal state to the foundation of...
The paper reviews the macroeconomic data describing the British economy during the industrial revolu...
Classic accounts of the English industrial revolution present a long period of stagnation followed b...
This article introduces a new source for assessing the distribution of wealth in early modern Englan...
Investment in capital, new technology, and agricultural techniques has not been considered an endeav...
When it comes to the British Industrial Revolution of the 18th Century, much of the mainstream econo...
Investment in capital, new technology, and agricultural techniques has not been considered an endeav...
When it comes to the British Industrial Revolution of the 18th Century, much of the mainstream econo...
We provide annual estimates of GDP for England over the period 1270-1700, constructed from the outp...
We provide annual estimates of GDP for England between 1270 and 1700 and for Great Britain between 1...
notes: Preprint to be published in Economic History Review; submitted following guidelines outlined ...
Geographically limited with a small population and few resources, how did England achieve great powe...
In his book, the Political Economy of Growth (1957), and in an article he wrote several years earlie...
We provide annual estimates of GDP for England between 1270 and 1700 and for Great Britain between 1...
We thank the Leverhulme Trust for funding this research under the project ‘History and the Future’.E...
Economic historians conventionally date the origins of the English fiscal state to the foundation of...
The paper reviews the macroeconomic data describing the British economy during the industrial revolu...
Classic accounts of the English industrial revolution present a long period of stagnation followed b...
This article introduces a new source for assessing the distribution of wealth in early modern Englan...