Routledge Handbook of Modern Economic History

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AK Model
Banking Panics
Bid Rent Functions
Business Cycle Chronologies
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Category=JP
Category=KCL
Category=KCP
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Category=NHB
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cliometric analysis
Cliometrics
Companion
Double Entry
Double Entry Bookkeeping
economic inequality
EH.Net
Employment Population Ratio
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eq_history
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Federal Open Market Committee
Federal Open Market Committee Meetings
Federal Reserve
Federal Reserve System
Financial History
Gdp Price Index
Great Depression
Immigrant Stream
institutional economics
IPUMS Sample
Knowledge Spillovers
labour market evolution
Military Expenditure
modern economic history research
Monthly IP Index
Net Nutritional Status
Primary School Enrollment Rate
PTO
quantitative economic methods
Royal Agricultural Society
Slave Prices
technological innovation history
Total Factor Productivity Growth
Vice Versa
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367866211
  • Weight: 680g
  • Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 12 Dec 2019
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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The Routledge Handbook of Modern Economic History aims to introduce readers to important approaches and findings of economic historians who study the modern world. Its short chapters reflect the most up-to-date research and are written by well-known economic historians who are authorities on their subjects.

Modern economic history blends two approaches – Cliometrics (which focuses on measuring economic variables and explicitly testing theories about the historical performance and development of the economy) and the New Institutional Economics (which focuses on how social, cultural, legal and organizational norms and rules shape economic outcomes and their evolution). Part 1 of the Handbook introduces these approaches and other important methodological issues for economic history.

The most fundamental shift in the economic history of the world began about two and a half centuries ago when eons of slow economic change and faltering economic growth gave way to sustained, rapid economic expansion. Part 2 examines this theme and the primary forces economic historians have linked to economic growth, stagnation and fluctuations – including technological change, entrepreneurship, competition, the biological environment, war, financial panics and business cycles.

Part 3 examines the evolution of broad sectors that typify a modern economy including agriculture, banking, transportation, health care, housing, and entertainment. It begins by examining an equally important "sector" of the economy which scholars have increasingly analyzed using economic tools – religion. Part 4 focuses on the work force and human outcomes including inequality, labor markets, unions, education, immigration, slavery, urbanization, and the evolving economic roles of women and African-Americans.

The text will be of great value to those taking economic history courses as well as a reference book useful to prof

Robert Whaples is Professor of Economics at Wake Forest University, USA.

Randall E. Parker is Professor of Economics at East Carolina University, USA.