At the end of the eighteenth century, England and France both underwent revolutions: France the French Revolution, England the industrial revolution. This note sheds new light on these contrasting experiences in the histories of England and France by looking at the evolution of real consumer prices in London and Paris in the centuries leading up to 1800. While in London building workers were facing low and stable consumer prices over the period, leaving plenty of scope for a demand-driven consumer revolution (in particular after 1650), their Parisian counterparts had to engage in a year-long grind to maintain a decent living, and often had to cut consumption to make ends meet. The exercise conducted in the present paper gives a quantitative...
The Industrial Revolution continues to be analysed by economic historians deploying the conceptual v...
Why was England the cradle of the Industrial Revolution? The present work shows that scale economies...
Western Europe by the midnineteenth century.1 The turning point of modern economic growth was a rema...
At the end of the eighteenth century, England and France both underwent revolutions: France the Fren...
It is conventionally assumed that the pre-modern working year was fixed and that consumption varied ...
It is conventionally assumed that the pre-modern working year was fixed and that consumption varied ...
that builds on big-push models by Murphy, Shleifer and Vishny (1989), combined with hierarchical pre...
Why was England first? And why Europe? We present a probabilistic model that builds on big-push mode...
This collection of essays offers new perspectives on the Industrial Revolution as a global phenomeno...
The main goal of this paper is to provide an integrated overview of the literature devoted to identi...
Economic crises and the origins of the French Revolution. This paper reexamines the quantitative ev...
Economic crises and the origins of the French Revolution. This paper reexamines the quantitative ev...
Why did the industrial revolution take place in eighteenth-century Britain and not elsewhere in Euro...
There are two views of the British Industrial Revolution in the literature today. The more tradition...
The Industrial Revolution continues to be analysed by economic historians deploying the conceptual v...
The Industrial Revolution continues to be analysed by economic historians deploying the conceptual v...
Why was England the cradle of the Industrial Revolution? The present work shows that scale economies...
Western Europe by the midnineteenth century.1 The turning point of modern economic growth was a rema...
At the end of the eighteenth century, England and France both underwent revolutions: France the Fren...
It is conventionally assumed that the pre-modern working year was fixed and that consumption varied ...
It is conventionally assumed that the pre-modern working year was fixed and that consumption varied ...
that builds on big-push models by Murphy, Shleifer and Vishny (1989), combined with hierarchical pre...
Why was England first? And why Europe? We present a probabilistic model that builds on big-push mode...
This collection of essays offers new perspectives on the Industrial Revolution as a global phenomeno...
The main goal of this paper is to provide an integrated overview of the literature devoted to identi...
Economic crises and the origins of the French Revolution. This paper reexamines the quantitative ev...
Economic crises and the origins of the French Revolution. This paper reexamines the quantitative ev...
Why did the industrial revolution take place in eighteenth-century Britain and not elsewhere in Euro...
There are two views of the British Industrial Revolution in the literature today. The more tradition...
The Industrial Revolution continues to be analysed by economic historians deploying the conceptual v...
The Industrial Revolution continues to be analysed by economic historians deploying the conceptual v...
Why was England the cradle of the Industrial Revolution? The present work shows that scale economies...
Western Europe by the midnineteenth century.1 The turning point of modern economic growth was a rema...