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pro vyhledávání: '"George Grantham"'
Autor:
George Grantham
Publikováno v:
Social Philosophy and Policy. 38:261-306
It appears likely that at its peak the classical economy was almost as large as that of Western Europe during the Industrial Revolution. The following review of the archeological and document evidence indicates that three events occurring in the firs
Autor:
George Grantham
Publikováno v:
Kritika: Explorations in Russian and Eurasian History. 16:859-889
La philosophie triomphe aisement des maux passes et des maux a venir. Mais les maux presents triomphent d'elle. --La Rochefoucauld Does History Matter, and How? A parlor game played by economic historians, in which economists occasionally participate
Autor:
George Grantham
Publikováno v:
The Journal of Economic History. 76:1275-1276
Publikováno v:
Explorations in Economic History. 46:160-167
In their new book, Creating Abundance: Biological Innovation and American Agricultural Development (Cambridge, 2008), Olmstead and Rhode offer a radically new interpretation of American agricultural development from the late 18th to early 20th centur
Autor:
George Grantham
Publikováno v:
European Review of Economic History. 12:155-165
The large-scale structure of world economic history exhibits three steady states punctuated by two phase transitions. The first transition arrived with the domestication of plants and animals; the second with the invention of engines capable of conve
Autor:
George Grantham
Publikováno v:
Basic Income Studies. 10
Thomas Piketty’s capitalism in the twenty-first century is arguably the most significant book in empirical economics since Simon Kuznets’s Modern Economic Growth (1966) and, on a theoretical plane, since Keynes’s General Theory (1936). Like Kuz
Autor:
George Grantham
Publikováno v:
The Journal of Economic History. 72:560-562
Autor:
George Grantham
Publikováno v:
The Economic History Review. 65:809-811
Autor:
George Grantham
Publikováno v:
European Review of Economic History. 3:199-232
The Ricardian model that inspires the conventional account of pre-industrial economic history assumes that productive opportunities are fully exploited, and that economic growth and fluctuations reflect the interaction of technological improvement, d