Economics and World History: Myths and ParadoxesWe cherish many myths about our histories. Not the least of these myths are those about economic history: such as the roots of depressions, the causes of growth and the reasons behind nations' different stages of economic development. Paul Bairoch sets out in this book to demolish 18 such myths and to reveal generally unnoticed but economically important turning points in modern economic history. |
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Page 103
On the same year I made a new estimate which I described as preliminary and containing a large margin of error . ... Appearing between the two Kuznets estimates we have that of David Landes , who , on the basis of Deane's estimate for ...
On the same year I made a new estimate which I described as preliminary and containing a large margin of error . ... Appearing between the two Kuznets estimates we have that of David Landes , who , on the basis of Deane's estimate for ...
Page 104
The data available for European countries are sufficient to validate a retrospective estimate of the level of GNP per capita of future developed countries around 1750 for which I arrived at an unrounded figure of $ 182 ; or , if one ...
The data available for European countries are sufficient to validate a retrospective estimate of the level of GNP per capita of future developed countries around 1750 for which I arrived at an unrounded figure of $ 182 ; or , if one ...
Page 143
Davis used the same estimates in two essays that appeared in 1965 , one of which was published in Scientific American.12 ... and therefore the proposed 63 % ' could be seen as a reasonable estimate of the percentage of the world's urban ...
Davis used the same estimates in two essays that appeared in 1965 , one of which was published in Scientific American.12 ... and therefore the proposed 63 % ' could be seen as a reasonable estimate of the percentage of the world's urban ...
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Contents
Was there Free Trade in the Rest of the World? | 30 |
Has Protectionism Always had a Negative Impact? | 44 |
Major Myths on the Role of the Third World in Western | 57 |
Copyright | |
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agricultural products already America annual average Bairoch balance began beginning Britain British capita cereals Chapter cities coal colonial compared concerned considered consumption costs cotton decline deficit depression developed countries duties early economic development economic growth Empire energy especially estimate Europe European example excluding exports fact factors figures foreign France free trade future Germany higher implies important increase indices Industrial Revolution Italy Japan lead least less liberal limited major manufactured means measures million tons myths negative nineteenth century noted period petroleum population present primary probably protection protectionism protectionist rapid raw materials reached regions relative represented rest result role sectors seen share situation Sources Statistics sugar Table tariff terms of trade textile Third World Trade balance turning United Kingdom urbanization various volume West Western