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 73
... share of the American economy was much lower than that of Europe , the United States accounted for only 15 % of the developed world's total exports to the Third World . During the entire nineteenth century United States exports to the ...
... share of the American economy was much lower than that of Europe , the United States accounted for only 15 % of the developed world's total exports to the Third World . During the entire nineteenth century United States exports to the ...
Page 75
... Share of Third World in total exports of : All Western developed countries Western Europe United States Japan All Western developed countries : share of the Third World in some exportsb Food , beverages , etc. of which cereals ...
... Share of Third World in total exports of : All Western developed countries Western Europe United States Japan All Western developed countries : share of the Third World in some exportsb Food , beverages , etc. of which cereals ...
Page 76
... share has declined and has returned to the levels of the early 1970s . This decline was due largely to a rapid increase of intra - European trade and especially Common Market trade . For these reasons , the Third World's share in ...
... share has declined and has returned to the levels of the early 1970s . This decline was due largely to a rapid increase of intra - European trade and especially Common Market trade . For these reasons , the Third World's share in ...
Contents
Were only the fascist economies able to overcome | 7 |
Was there a Golden Era of European Free Trade? | 16 |
NonEuropean traditional trade policies before the nineteenth | 30 |
Copyright | |
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Africa agricultural products annual growth rate Argentina average Bairoch Britain British capita GNP cereals Chapter China coal colonial commercial policy compared consumption Continental Europe Corn Laws cotton decline deficit depression developed world economic development economic growth Economic History economists Empire especially estimate European countries excluding fact factors figures foreign trade France free trade future developed countries future Third World Germany global GNP per capita higher implies import duties Industrial Revolution international trade Japan Latin America League of Nations less liberal major million tons negative nineteenth century Ottoman Empire period petroleum population growth probably protectionism protectionist raw materials regions represented result role sectors share situation Statistics sugar Table terms of trade textile Third World market total exports Trade balance trade policy trend tropical turning point underdevelopment unemployment United Kingdom United Nations urbanization various issues volume Western developed countries Western Europe World market economies