Training through apprenticeship provided the main mechanism for occupational human capital formation in pre-industrial England. This paper demonstrates how training premiums (fees) complemented the formal legal framework surrounding apprenticeship to secure training contracts. Premiums varied in response to scarcity rents, the expected productivity of masters and apprentices, and served as compensation for the anticipated risk of default. In most trades premiums were small enough to allow access to apprenticeship training for youths from modest families
We use HISCLASS to code the occupational titles of over 30,000 English male workers according to the...
Preindustrial apprenticeship is often considered more stable than its nineteenth- and twentieth cent...
This thesis uses apprenticeship indentures to offer a novel insight into guilds and apprenticeship i...
Despite poor information flows, high levels of uncertainty, and low completion rates, training throu...
This paper re-examines the economics of premodern apprenticeship in England. I present new data show...
We examine the role of social and geographical networks in structuring entry into premodern London's...
This paper examines how contacts were used to secure apprenticeships in Early Modern Europe. How app...
Apprenticeship has been discussed from two angles. The first sees apprenticeship as a response to th...
England was the only pre-modern European country with national legislation covering apprenticeship (...
Pre-industrial apprenticeship is often considered more stable than its nineteenth- and twentieth-cen...
Pre-industrial apprenticeship is often considered more stable than its nineteenth- and twentieth-cen...
The role of skills and human capital during England’s Industrial Revolution is the subject of an old...
Preindustrial apprenticeship is often considered more stable than its nineteenth- and twentieth cent...
The role of skills and human capital during England’s Industrial Revolution is the subject of an old...
This article uses recently digitized samples of apprentices and masters in London and Bristol to qua...
We use HISCLASS to code the occupational titles of over 30,000 English male workers according to the...
Preindustrial apprenticeship is often considered more stable than its nineteenth- and twentieth cent...
This thesis uses apprenticeship indentures to offer a novel insight into guilds and apprenticeship i...
Despite poor information flows, high levels of uncertainty, and low completion rates, training throu...
This paper re-examines the economics of premodern apprenticeship in England. I present new data show...
We examine the role of social and geographical networks in structuring entry into premodern London's...
This paper examines how contacts were used to secure apprenticeships in Early Modern Europe. How app...
Apprenticeship has been discussed from two angles. The first sees apprenticeship as a response to th...
England was the only pre-modern European country with national legislation covering apprenticeship (...
Pre-industrial apprenticeship is often considered more stable than its nineteenth- and twentieth-cen...
Pre-industrial apprenticeship is often considered more stable than its nineteenth- and twentieth-cen...
The role of skills and human capital during England’s Industrial Revolution is the subject of an old...
Preindustrial apprenticeship is often considered more stable than its nineteenth- and twentieth cent...
The role of skills and human capital during England’s Industrial Revolution is the subject of an old...
This article uses recently digitized samples of apprentices and masters in London and Bristol to qua...
We use HISCLASS to code the occupational titles of over 30,000 English male workers according to the...
Preindustrial apprenticeship is often considered more stable than its nineteenth- and twentieth cent...
This thesis uses apprenticeship indentures to offer a novel insight into guilds and apprenticeship i...