This paper re-examines the classic demographic or 'real' model, essentially based on a Malthusian-Ricardian model, that the late Michael Postan (Cambridge) utilized to explain the behaviour of the later-medieval western European economy, and in particular the behaviour of price movements. In essence, Postan had argued that just as population growth, with a relatively static agrarian technology, and thus with the inevitable Law of Diminishing returns, had drive up grain prices during the 'long thirteenth century' (c. 1180- c.1320), so, in reverse fashion, population decline during the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries led to a fall in grain prices. The drastic alteration in the land:labour ratio also led to a rise in real wages and a fall i...
The paper forms three series for farm workers 1209-1869: nominal wages, the marginal product of farm...
Paper given at a conference organised by the Centre for Metropolitan History and supported by the Ec...
In this paper, I investigate the “little divergence” of late medieval and early modern Europe, focus...
The primary explanation for the marked rise in real wages in both England and Flanders, from the lat...
Bedevilling the ongoing debate about changes in real-incomes in late-medieval western Europe, especi...
The narrative of the post-Black Death English economy has been shaped by two contrasting interpretat...
The narrative of the post-Black Death English economy has been shaped by two contrasting interpretat...
This article challenges the growing consensus in the literature that medieval manorial managers were...
This article challenges the growing consensus in the literature that medieval manorial managers were...
This chapter presents a simple econometric model of the medieval English economy, focusing on the re...
Abstract: At the centre of the debate on pre\u2010industrial economic growth is the study of market ...
The traditional and almost universal method of expressing real wages is by index numbers, according ...
The rise of factor markets during the transition from the middle ages into the early modern was of c...
The "crisis of feudalism" and price movements in the late Middle Ages John Day In a critique of th...
In a recent issue of this journal Bruce Campbell has suggested that England was able to avoid the ki...
The paper forms three series for farm workers 1209-1869: nominal wages, the marginal product of farm...
Paper given at a conference organised by the Centre for Metropolitan History and supported by the Ec...
In this paper, I investigate the “little divergence” of late medieval and early modern Europe, focus...
The primary explanation for the marked rise in real wages in both England and Flanders, from the lat...
Bedevilling the ongoing debate about changes in real-incomes in late-medieval western Europe, especi...
The narrative of the post-Black Death English economy has been shaped by two contrasting interpretat...
The narrative of the post-Black Death English economy has been shaped by two contrasting interpretat...
This article challenges the growing consensus in the literature that medieval manorial managers were...
This article challenges the growing consensus in the literature that medieval manorial managers were...
This chapter presents a simple econometric model of the medieval English economy, focusing on the re...
Abstract: At the centre of the debate on pre\u2010industrial economic growth is the study of market ...
The traditional and almost universal method of expressing real wages is by index numbers, according ...
The rise of factor markets during the transition from the middle ages into the early modern was of c...
The "crisis of feudalism" and price movements in the late Middle Ages John Day In a critique of th...
In a recent issue of this journal Bruce Campbell has suggested that England was able to avoid the ki...
The paper forms three series for farm workers 1209-1869: nominal wages, the marginal product of farm...
Paper given at a conference organised by the Centre for Metropolitan History and supported by the Ec...
In this paper, I investigate the “little divergence” of late medieval and early modern Europe, focus...