We provide annual estimates of GDP for England between 1270 and 1700 and for Great Britain between 1700 and 1870, constructed from the output side. The GDP data are combined with population estimates to calculate GDP per capita. We find English per capita income growth of 0.20 per cent per annum between 1270 and 1700, although growth was episodic, with the strongest growth during the Black Death crisis of the fourteenth century and in the second half of the seventeenth century. For the period 1700-1870, we find British per capita income growth of 0.48 per cent, broadly in line with the widely accepted Crafts/Harley estimates. This modest trend growth in per capita income since 1270 suggests that, working back from the present, living standa...
Structural transformation is a key indicator of economic development. We present the first time seri...
This paper presents new estimates of total factor productivity growth in Britain for the period 1770...
This paper argues that non-random measurement errors in the estimates of British Gross Domestic Pro...
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...
data are combined with population estimates to calculate GDP per capita. We find English per capita ...
This is a definitive new account of Britain's economic evolution from a backwater of Europe in 1270 ...
This paper provides the first annual GDP series for Great Britain over the period 1700-1870. The se...
This paper reconstructs GDP from the output side for medieval and early modern Britain. In contrast ...
This paper provides a time-series analysis of recent annual estimates of real GDP and industrial out...
British per capita GDP grew at an average annual rate of 0.13 per cent between 1086 and 1700. Althou...
The paper forms three series for farm workers 1209-1869: nominal wages, the marginal product of farm...
This paper attempts to estimate trends in the levels of economic surplus, public and private investm...
Estimates of capital formation and the stock of capital in Britain are provided for the period 1270-...
What were income trends before the Industrial Revolution? Clark (2007b) argued on both theoretical ...
Structural transformation is a key indicator of economic development. We present the first time seri...
This paper presents new estimates of total factor productivity growth in Britain for the period 1770...
This paper argues that non-random measurement errors in the estimates of British Gross Domestic Pro...
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...
data are combined with population estimates to calculate GDP per capita. We find English per capita ...
This is a definitive new account of Britain's economic evolution from a backwater of Europe in 1270 ...
This paper provides the first annual GDP series for Great Britain over the period 1700-1870. The se...
This paper reconstructs GDP from the output side for medieval and early modern Britain. In contrast ...
This paper provides a time-series analysis of recent annual estimates of real GDP and industrial out...
British per capita GDP grew at an average annual rate of 0.13 per cent between 1086 and 1700. Althou...
The paper forms three series for farm workers 1209-1869: nominal wages, the marginal product of farm...
This paper attempts to estimate trends in the levels of economic surplus, public and private investm...
Estimates of capital formation and the stock of capital in Britain are provided for the period 1270-...
What were income trends before the Industrial Revolution? Clark (2007b) argued on both theoretical ...
Structural transformation is a key indicator of economic development. We present the first time seri...
This paper presents new estimates of total factor productivity growth in Britain for the period 1770...
This paper argues that non-random measurement errors in the estimates of British Gross Domestic Pro...