Content
May 2024, Volume 18, Issue 2
- 327-333 Claudia Goldin: Nobel Prize 2023 paving the way for women and gender perspectives in economics
by Faustine Perrin - 335-361 Economic development, female wages and missing female births in Spain, 1900–1930
by Rebeca Echavarri & Francisco J. Beltrán Tapia - 363-403 An analysis of the occupations of free women in the antebellum USA
by Barry R. Chiswick & Francisco RaeAnn Halenda Robinson - 405-451 Influenza pandemics and macroeconomic fluctuations 1871–2016
by Fraser Summerfield & Livio Di Matteo - 453-491 The Celestial Empire: solar eclipses, political legitimacy, and economic performance in historical China
by Chengjiu Sun & Hongfei Li - 493-529 Confucianism and war mobilization: evidence from Chinese revolutions
by Yang Cai & Sijie Hu & Shengmin Sun - 531-565 Sicilian sulphur and mafia: resources, working conditions and the practice of violence
by Carlo Ciccarelli & Alberto Dalmazzo & Tiziano Razzolini - 567-617 The origins of Italian human capital divides: new evidence from marriage
by Marco Martinez
January 2024, Volume 18, Issue 1
- 1-36 Path dependence in an evolving system: a modeling perspective
by Thomas Brenner & Sonja zu Jeddeloh - 37-102 Gender inequality in a transition economy: heights and sexual height dimorphism in Southwestern France, 1640–1850
by Leonardo Ridolfi - 103-149 The urban–rural height gap: evidence from late nineteenth-century Catalonia
by Ramon Ramon-Muñoz & Josep-Maria Ramon-Muñoz - 151-189 Competitive devaluations in the 1930s: myth or reality?
by Jonas Ljungberg - 191-220 Measuring stock market integration during the Gold Standard
by Rebecca Stuart - 221-249 Bank risk and stockholding (1910-1934)
by Matthew Jaremski - 251-325 Benchmarking Latvia’s economy: a new estimate of gross domestic product in the 1930s
by Zenonas Norkus & Jurgita Markeviciute & Ola Grytten & Janis Šilinš & Adomas Klimantas
January 2023, Volume 17, Issue 1
- 1-22 Recent trends in publications of economic historians in Europe and North America (1980–2019): an empirical analysis
by Nadia Fernández-de-Pinedo & Alvaro La Parra-Perez & Félix-Fernando Muñoz - 23-48 Is economic history changing its nature? Evidence from top journals
by Martina Cioni & Giovanni Federico & Michelangelo Vasta - 49-89 The benefits of US statehood: an analysis of the growth effects of joining the USA
by Robbert Maseland & Rok Spruk - 91-124 Wealth and shifting demand pressures on the price level in England after the Black Death
by Anthony Edo & Jacques Melitz - 125-154 British slave emancipation and the demand for Brazilian sugar
by Christopher David Absell - 155-183 Counting the missing poor in pre-industrial societies
by Mathieu Lefebvre & Pierre Pestieau & Gregory Ponthiere
January 2022, Volume 16, Issue 1
- 1-28 Capital in Spain, 1850–2019
by Leandro Prados de la Escosura - 29-77 The significance of climate variability on early modern European grain prices
by Fredrik Charpentier Ljungqvist & Peter Thejll & Bo Christiansen & Andrea Seim & Claudia Hartl & Jan Esper - 79-104 Neonatal discrimination and excess female mortality in childhood in Spain in the first half of the twentieth century
by Rebeca Echavarri - 105-147 Why Eurasia? A probe into the origins of global inequalities
by Ideen A. Riahi - 149-173 A colonial cash cow: the return on investments in British Malaya, 1889–1969
by Klas Rönnbäck & Oskar Broberg & Stefania Galli - 175-211 Inequality in late colonial Indonesia: new evidence on regional differences
by Pim de Zwart
September 2021, Volume 15, Issue 3
- 477-534 Complex networks to understand the past: the case of roads in Bourbon Spain
by Federico Pablo-Martí & Ángel Alañón-Pardo & Angel Sánchez - 535-563 Domestic migrations in Spain during its first industrialisation, 1840s–1870s
by Carlos Santiago-Caballero - 565-674 New estimation of the gross domestic product in Baltic countries in 1913–1938
by Zenonas Norkus & Jurgita Markeviciute - 675-718 Did profitable slave trading enable the expansion of empire?: The Asiento de Negros, the South Sea Company and the financial revolution in Great Britain
by Gregory Price & Warren Whatley - 719-751 New economic geography and economic history: a survey of recent contributions through the lens of the Spanish industrialization process
by Julio Martinez-Galarraga & Elisenda Paluzie & Jordi Pons & Javier Silvestre & Daniel A. Tirado - 755-786 Missing work: absenteeism at Pepperell Manufacturing Co. in 1883
by Joyce Burnette
May 2021, Volume 15, Issue 2
- 231-265 Can pandemics affect educational attainment? Evidence from the polio epidemic of 1916
by Keith Meyers & Melissa A. Thomasson - 267-318 What limits the efficacy of coercion?
by Øivind Schøyen - 319-389 Elite violence and elite numeracy in Europe from 500 to 1900 CE: roots of the divergence
by Thomas Keywood & Jörg Baten - 391-418 A lucrative end: abolition, immigration, and the new occupational hierarchy in southeast Brazil
by Justin R. Bucciferro - 419-442 Econometric history of the growth–volatility relationship in the USA: 1919–2017
by Amélie Charles & Olivier Darné - 443-476 Inequality and conflict as drivers of cooperation: the location of wine cooperatives in pre-1936 Spain
by Samuel Garrido
January 2021, Volume 15, Issue 1
- 1-42 The race between the snail and the tortoise: skill premium and early industrialization in Italy (1861–1913)
by Giovanni Federico & Alessandro Nuvolari & Leonardo Ridolfi & Michelangelo Vasta - 43-88 Characterizing a legal–intellectual culture: Bacon, Coke, and seventeenth-century England
by Peter Grajzl & Peter Murrell - 89-131 Crowding out the change: business networks and persisting economic elites in the South of Italy over Unification (1840–1880)
by Maria Carmela Schisani & Luigi Balletta & Giancarlo Ragozini - 135-166 Height in twentieth-century Chilean men: growth with divergence
by Manuel Llorca-Jaña & Juan Navarrete-Montalvo & Roberto Araya-Valenzuela & Federico Droller & Martina Allende & Javier Rivas - 167-202 Neither the elite, nor the mass. The rise of intermediate human capital during the French industrialization process
by Claude Diebolt & Charlotte Le Chapelain & Audrey Rose Menard - 203-229 A “Silent Revolution”: school reforms and Italy’s educational gender gap in the Liberal Age (1861–1921)
by Gabriele Cappelli & Michelangelo Vasta
May 2020, Volume 14, Issue 2
- 181-225 Medical education reforms and the origins of the rural physician shortage
by Carolyn M. Moehling & Gregory T. Niemesh & Melissa A. Thomasson & Jaret Treber - 227-281 A new estimate of Lithuanian GDP for 1937: How does interwar Lithuania compare?
by Adomas Klimantas1 & Aras Zirgulis - 283-323 How much did uncertainty shocks matter in the Great Depression?
by Gabriel P. Mathy - 325-365 Industrial activities and primary schooling in early nineteenth-century France
by Adrien Montalbo - 397-416 How many rushed during the Oklahoma land openings?
by Douglas W. Allen & Bryan Leonard
January 2020, Volume 14, Issue 1
- 1-39 The long-term evolution of economic history: evidence from the top five field journals (1927–2017)
by Martina Cioni & Giovanni Federico & Michelangelo Vasta - 41-60 The impact of the 1932 General Tariff: a difference-in-difference approach
by Simon P. Lloyd & Solomos Solomou - 61-103 Monetary and fiscal interactions in the USA during the 1940s
by Andrew Bossie - 105-128 The introduction of the reserve clause in Major League Baseball: evidence of its impact on select player salaries during the 1880s
by Jennifer K. Ashcraft & Craig A. Depken - 129-167 Human lifetime entropy in a historical perspective (1750–2014)
by Patrick Meyer & Gregory Ponthiere
January 2019, Volume 13, Issue 1
- 1-23 Gallman revisited: blacksmithing and American manufacturing, 1850–1870
by Jeremy Atack & Robert A. Margo - 25-54 Key forces behind the decline of fertility: lessons from childlessness in Rouen before the industrial revolution
by Sandra Brée & David de la Croix - 55-82 Heterogeneous treatment effects of safe water on infectious disease: Do meteorological factors matter?
by Kota Ogasawara & Yukitoshi Matsushita - 83-125 Economic history goes digital: topic modeling the Journal of Economic History
by Lino Wehrheim - 127-161 Market versus endowment: explaining early industrial location in Italy (1871–1911)
by Anna Missiaia
January 2018, Volume 12, Issue 1
- 1-31 Public health improvements and mortality in interwar Tokyo: a Bayesian disease mapping approach
by Kota Ogasawara & Shinichiro Shirota & Genya Kobayashi - 33-60 Biological well-being in late nineteenth-century Philippines
by Jean-Pascal Bassino & Marion Dovis & John Komlos - 61-97 The role of production factor quality and technology diffusion in twentieth-century productivity growth
by Antonin Bergeaud & Gilbert Cette & Rémy Lecat - 99-126 Human capital formation in the long run: evidence from average years of schooling in England, 1300–1900
by Alexandra M. de Pleijt - 127-152 Hysteresis and persistent long-term unemployment: the American Beveridge Curve of the Great Depression and World War II
by Gabriel P. Mathy - 153-180 Private banks in early Michigan, 1837–1884
by Christopher Bailey & Tarique Hossain & Gary Pecquet
May 2017, Volume 11, Issue 2
- 153-182 Transatlantic wage gaps and the migration decision: Europe–Canada in the 1920s
by Alex Armstrong & Frank D. Lewis - 183-216 Reassessing the bank–industry relationship in Italy, 1913–1936: a counterfactual analysis
by Michelangelo Vasta & Carlo Drago & Roberto Ricciuti & Alberto Rinaldi
January 2017, Volume 11, Issue 1
- 1-30 Human capital formation from occupations: the ‘deskilling hypothesis’ revisited
by Alexandra M. de Pleijt & Jacob L. Weisdorf - 31-61 Market potential and city growth: Spain 1860–1960
by Rafael González-Val & Daniel A. Tirado-Fabregat & Elisabet Viladecans-Marsal - 63-92 Non-financial hurdles for human capital accumulation: landownership in Korea under Japanese rule
by Bogang Jun & Tai-Yoo Kim
September 2016, Volume 10, Issue 3
- 251-275 Mismeasuring long-run growth: the bias from splicing national accounts—the case of Spain
by Leandro Prados de la Escosura
may 2016, Volume 10, Issue 2
- 129-149 Sailing away from Malthus: intercontinental trade and European economic growth, 1500–1800
by Nuno Palma - 151-179 The competition and coexistence of mutual and commercial banks in New England, 1870–1914
by Matthew Jaremski & Brady Plastaras - 181-195 The occupations of slaves sold in New Orleans: Missing values, cheap talk, or informative advertising?
by Jonathan Pritchett & Jessica Hayes - 197-224 Colonial adventures in tropical agriculture: new estimates of returns to investment in the Netherlands Indies, 1919–1938
by Frans Buelens & Ewout Frankema - 225-250 Historical trade integration: globalization and the distance puzzle in the long twentieth century
by Samuel Standaert & Stijn Ronsse & Benjamin Vandermarliere
january 2016, Volume 10, Issue 1
- 1-4 Cliometrica after 10 years: definition and principles of cliometric research
by Claude Diebolt - 5-30 Time-varying price discovery in the eighteenth century: empirical evidence from the London and Amsterdam stock markets
by Adrian R. Bell & Chris Brooks & Nick Taylor - 31-54 Speculative pricing in the Liverpool cotton futures market: a nonlinear tale of noise traders and fundamentalists from the 1920s
by Giulio Cifarelli & Paolo Paesani - 55-98 Good for girls or bad for boys? Schooling, social inequality and intrahousehold allocation in early twentieth century Finland
by Sakari Saaritsa & Antti Kaihovaara - 99-128 Tracing the reversal of fortune in the Americas: Bolivian GDP per capita since the mid-nineteenth century
by Alfonso Herranz-Loncán & José Alejandro Peres-Cajías
september 2015, Volume 9, Issue 3
- 265-287 Markets before economic growth: the grain market of medieval England
by Gregory Clark - 289-330 Slave prices and productivity at the Cape of Good Hope from 1700 to 1725: Did everyone win from the trade?
by Sophia Du Plessis & Ada Jansen & Dieter von Fintel - 333-358 Immunity from the resource curse? The long run impact of commodity price volatility: evidence from Canada, 1900–2005
by Ian Keay - 359-396 On the causes of economic growth in Europe: why did agricultural labour productivity not converge between 1950 and 2005?
by Miguel Martin-Retortillo & Vicente Pinilla
May 2015, Volume 9, Issue 2
- 131-137 John Allen James: A scholarly remembrance
by Christopher L. Hanes & Hugh Rockoff & Mark Thomas & David F. Weiman - 139-166 Unigeniture in an uncertain world
by Paul L. E. Grieco & Nicolas L. Ziebarth - 167-191 Recalculating Swedish pre-census demographic data: Was there acceleration in early modern population growth?
by Rodney Benjamin Edvinsson - 193-207 Entrepreneurship in Wiltshire, England, almost 1,000 years ago
by John McDonald - 209-233 Total factor productivity, domestic knowledge accumulation, and international knowledge spillovers in the second half of the twentieth century
by Teresa Sanchis & Juan A. Sanchis-Llopis & Vicente Esteve & Antonio Cubel - 235-264 West versus Far East: early globalization and the great divergence
by Rafael Dobado-González & Alfredo García-Hiernaux & David E. Guerrero
January 2015, Volume 9, Issue 1
- 1-25 Adverse clearings in a monetary system with multiple note issuers: the case of Italy (1861-1893)
by Giuseppina Gianfreda & Fabrizio Mattesini - 27-48 Commons and the standard of living debate in Spain, 1860–1930
by Francisco J. Beltrán Tapia - 49-75 Risk sharing with the monarch: contingent debt and excusable defaults in the age of Philip II, 1556–1598
by Mauricio Drelichman & Hans-Joachim Voth - 77-95 Long-run stock returns: evidence from Belgium 1838–2010
by Jan Annaert & Frans Buelens & Marc Deloof - 97-130 The impact of social workers on infant mortality in inter-war Tokyo: Bayesian dynamic panel quantile regression with endogenous variables
by Kota Ogasawara & Genya Kobayashi
September 2014, Volume 8, Issue 3
- 271-300 Educational and income inequality in Europe, ca. 1870–2000
by Péter Földvári & Bas van Leeuwen - 301-334 The Italian financial cycle: 1861-2011
by Riccardo De Bonis & Andrea Silvestrini - 335-369 Relative deprivation and labour conflict during Spain’s industrialization: the Bilbao estuary, 1914–1936
by Stefan Oliver Houpt & Juan Carlos Rojo Cagigal
May 2014, Volume 8, Issue 2
- 145-171 The demand for tobacco in post-unification Italy
by Carlo Ciccarelli & Gianni De Fraja - 173-200 Engineering and labor specialization during the industrial revolution
by Darrell J. Glaser & Ahmed S. Rahman - 201-239 The economic costs of sleaze or how replacing samurai with bureaucrats boosted regional growth in Meiji Japan
by Katharina Muehlhoff - 241-269 Equity premium in Finland and long-term performance of the Finnish equity and money markets
by Peter Nyberg & Mika Vaihekoski
January 2014, Volume 8, Issue 1
- 1-3 Robert William Fogel remembrance
by Claudia Goldin - 5-26 The spinning jenny and the guillotine: technology diffusion at the time of revolutions
by Ugo M. Gragnolat & Daniele Moschella & Emanuele Pugliese - 27-48 Careers and wages in the Dutch East India Company
by Claude Rei - 49-78 Did patents of introduction encourage technology transfer? Long-term evidence from the Spanish innovation system
by Patricio Sáiz - 79-113 : Performance, pay and promotion: implementing a Weberian bureaucracy in nineteenth century Baden
by Felix Selgert - 115-140 : Received wisdom versus reality: height, nutrition, and urbanization in mid-nineteenth-century France
by Laurent Heyberger
September 2013, Volume 7, Issue 3
- 207-235 Tariffs and income: a time series analysis for 24 countries
by Markus Lampe & Paul Sharp - 237-266 Conflict-induced migration of composers: an individual-level study
by Karol Jan Borowiecki - 267-294 Fiscal policy response to cycles under two regimes: Spain 1950–1998
by Stefano Battilossi & Regina Escario & James Foreman-Peck - 295-318 Trade policy and wage gradients: evidence from a protectionist turn
by Daniel A. Tirado & Jordi Pons & Elisenda Paluzie & Julio Martínez-Galarraga - 319-339 Variability in overseas travel by Americans, 1820–2000
by Brandon Dupont & Thomas Weiss
May 2013, Volume 7, Issue 2
- 99-130 Wall Street and Main Street: the macroeconomic consequences of New York bank suspensions, 1866–1914
by John A. James & James McAndrews & David F. Weiman - 131-159 Wage and employment determination in volatile times: Sweden 1913-1939
by Bertil Holmlund - 161-187 Health, market integration, and the urban height penalty in the US, 1847–1894
by Matthias Zehetmayer - 189-206 Nutrition and signaling in slave markets: a new look at a puzzle within the antebellum puzzle
by Lee A. Craig & Robert G. Hammond
January 2013, Volume 7, Issue 1
- 1-13 Incentives in merchant empires: Portuguese and Dutch compensation schemes
by Claudia Rei - 15-35 The housing slump and the great depression in the USA
by David Greasley & Jakob B. Madsen - 37-60 Swedish GDP 1620-1800 : stagnation or growth ?
by Rodney Benjamin Edvinsson - 61-85 Time or spot ? A revaluation of Amsterdam market data prior to 1747
by Brian Beach & Stephen Norman & Douglas Wills - 87-98 Equilibrium and adjustment of exchange rates in the Chinese silver standard economy, 1928-1935
by Tai-kuang Ho & Cheng-chung Lai & Joshua Jr-shiang Gau
October 2012, Volume 6, Issue 3
- 223-248 Child labor legislation: effective, benign, both, or neither?
by Federico A. Bugni - 249-266 Parental altruism and child labor: examining the historical evidence from the United States
by V. Bhaskar & Bishnupriya Gupta - 267-306 Regional convergence in Italy, 1891–2001: testing human and social capital
by Emanuele Felice - 307-328 On the cyclical variability of economic growth in Italy, 1881–1913: a critical note
by Lisa Sella & Roberto Marchionatti
May 2012, Volume 6, Issue 2
- 115-142 UK World War I and interwar data for business cycle and growth analysis
by James M. Nason & Shaun P. Vahey - 143-162 Regime switching and wages in major league baseball under the reserve clause
by Michael Haupert & James Murray - 163-192 The rise of the US Portland cement industry and the role of public science
by David Prentice - 193-209 A quantile approach to the demographic, residential, and socioeconomic effects on 19th-century African-American body mass index values
by Scott Alan Carson - 211-219 A critical note on "This time is different"
by Antoine Parent - 221-221 Erratum to: Prices, wages and fertility in pre-industrial England
by Marc P. B. Klemp
January 2012, Volume 6, Issue 1
- 1-28 The demographic transition: causes and consequences
by Oded Galor - 29-44 The effect of investment in children’s education on fertility in 1816 Prussia
by Sascha O. Becker & Francesco Cinnirella & Ludger Woessmann - 45-62 The diminution of the physical stature of the English male population in the eighteenth century
by John Komlos & Helmut Küchenhoff - 63-77 Prices, wages and fertility in pre-industrial England
by Marc P. B. Klemp - 79-88 French revolution or industrial revolution? A note on the contrasting experiences of England and France up to 1800
by Paul R. Sharp & Jacob L. Weisdorf - 89-114 Food availability, food entitlements, and radicalism during the Chinese great leap forward famine: an econometric panel data analysis
by Matthieu Clément
October 2011, Volume 5, Issue 3
- 205-238 Do Kondratieff waves exist? How time series techniques can help to solve the problem
by Rainer Metz - 239-258 Measuring core inflation in Italy comparing aggregate vs. disaggregate price data
by Giacomo Sbrana & Andrea Silvestrini - 259-290 Regional specialisation and industry location in the long run: Spain in the US mirror (1856-2002)
by Concha Betrán - 291-321 The early diffusion of the steam engine in Britain, 1700–1800: a reappraisal
by Alessandro Nuvolari & Bart Verspagen & Nick von Tunzelmann
June 2011, Volume 5, Issue 2
- 101-119 Real business cycle models of the Great Depression
by Luca Pensieroso - 121-144 Do technological booms matter? New evidence on the relationship between firm size and innovativeness
by Harald Degner - 145-164 Manumission in nineteenth-century Virginia
by Howard Bodenhorn - 165-186 What can price volatility tell us about market efficiency? Conditional heteroscedasticity in historical commodity price series
by Péter Földvári & Bas van Leeuwen - 187-203 Clearinghouse membership and deposit contraction during the Panic of 1893
by Christopher Hoag
January 2011, Volume 5, Issue 1
- 1-25 Early twentieth-century Japanese worker saving: precautionary behaviour before a social safety net
by John A. James & Isao Suto - 27-52 Why did the League of Nations fail?
by Jari Eloranta - 53-78 Nominal wage rigidity prior to compulsory arbitration: evidence from the Victorian Railways, 1902–1921
by Andrew Seltzer & André Sammartino - 79-100 Large shocks in U.S. macroeconomic time series: 1860-1988
by Olivier Darné & Amélie Charles
October 2010, Volume 4, Issue 3
- 229-267 The dynamics of inequality in a newly settled, pre-industrial society: the case of the Cape Colony
by Johan Fourie & Dieter von Fintel - 269-292 The effects of unification: markets, policy, and cyclical convergence in Italy, 1861–1913
by Carlo Ciccarelli & Stefano Fenoaltea & Tommaso Proietti - 293-319 Military conquest and sovereign debt: Chile, Peru and the London bond market, 1876–1890
by Richard Sicotte & Catalina Vizcarra & Kirsten Wandschneider - 321-348 Wily welfare capitalist: Werner von Siemens and the pension plan
by Jakub Kast & Lyndon Moore
June 2010, Volume 4, Issue 2
- 113-139 American education in the age of mass migrations 1870–1930
by Fabrice Murtin & Martina Viarengo - 141-170 A Schumpeterian view of the Great Merger Movement in American manufacturing
by Donald J. Smythe - 171-205 Fallacious convergence? Williamson’s real wage comparisons under scrutiny
by Svante Prado - 207-228 Personalty interests at the Constitutional Convention: new tests of the Beard thesis
by Jac C. Heckelman & Keith L. Dougherty
January 2010, Volume 4, Issue 1
- 1-17 Ranking economic history journals: a citation-based impact-adjusted analysis
by Gianfranco Di Vaio & Jacob Louis Weisdorf - 19-50 Explaining UK wage inequality in the past globalisation period, 1880–1913
by C. Betrán & J. Ferri & Maria A. Pons - 51-73 Filter-design and model-based analysis of trends and cycles in the presence of outliers and structural breaks
by Rainer Metz - 75-96 Common stock returns in the pre-WWI Berlin Stock Exchange
by Caroline Fohlin & Steffen Reinhold - 97-111 Reflection on reflections: review essay on reflections on the cliometric revolution: conversations with economic historians
by Ann M. Carlos
October 2009, Volume 3, Issue 3
- 191-219 Understanding West German economic growth in the 1950s
by Barry Eichengreen & Albrecht Ritschl - 221-244 Modelling trends and cycles in economic time series: historical perspective and future developments
by Terence C. Mills - 245-273 Quantifying the relative importance of export industries in a small open economy during the great depression of the 1930s: an input-output approach
by Jari Kauppila - 275-300 French economic cycles: a wavelet analysis of French retrospective GNP series
by Patrice Baubeau & Bernard Cazelles
June 2009, Volume 3, Issue 2
- 97-121 The fiscal impact of the War of the Pacific
by Richard Sicotte & Catalina Vizcarra & Kirsten Wandschneider - 123-139 A cliometric analysis of the Aldo Moro kidnapping and assassination
by Bertrand Crettez & Régis Deloche - 141-164 Institutional changes, wars and stock market risk in an emerging economy: evidence from the Israeli stock exchange, 1945–1960
by Raphaël Franck & Miriam Krausz - 165-190 Structural change and growth accelerations in Asia and Latin America: a new sectoral data set
by Marcel P. Timmer & Gaaitzen J. de Vries
January 2009, Volume 3, Issue 1
- 1-26 Contract enforcement, capital accumulation, and Argentina's long-run decline
by Leandro Prados de la Escosura & Isabel Sanz-Villarroya - 27-54 Panic in the plains: agricultural markets and the panic of 1893
by Brandon R. Dupont - 55-70 From preventive to permissive checks: the changing nature of the Malthusian relationship between nuptiality and the price of provisions in the nineteenth century
by Jacob Weisdorf & Paul Sharp - 71-95 Human capital and economic growth: Sweden 1870–2000
by Jonas Ljungberg & Anders Nilsson
October 2008, Volume 2, Issue 3
- 143-171 The Laspeyres-Paradox: tax overshifting in nineteenth century Prussia
by Mark Spoerer - 195-212 Agglomeration and labour productivity in Spain over the long term
by Julio Martínez-Galarraga & Elisenda Paluzie & Jordi Pons & Daniel A. Tirado-Fabregat - 213-228 Exploring historical economic relationships: two and a half centuries of British interest rates and inflation
by Terence C. Mills - 229-257 On the road to industrialization: nutritional status in Saxony, 1690–1850
by Francesco Cinnirella - 259-274 The quest for a fiscal rule: Italy, 1861–1998
by Roberto Ricciuti
July 2008, Volume 2, Issue 2
- 85-117 The devil is in the details: assessing early industrial performance across international borders using late nineteenth century North American manufacturers as a case study
by Kris Inwood & Ian Keay - 119-141 Financial market reactions to the overthrow and annexation of the Hawaiian Kingdom: evidence from London, Honolulu and New York
by Richard C. K. Burdekin & Leroy O. Laney - 143-171 Wealth accumulation motives: evidence from the probate records of Ontario, 1892 and 1902
by Livio Di Matteo
April 2008, Volume 2, Issue 1
- 1-3 Ken Sokoloff Remembrance
by The Editors - 5-17 The German crisis of 1931: evidence and tradition
by Peter Temin - 19-48 Convergence (and divergence) in the biological standard of living in the USA, 1820–1900
by Areendam Chanda & Lee A. Craig & Julianne Treme - 49-83 Minimum distance estimation of the spatial panel autoregressive model
by Théophile Azomahou
October 2007, Volume 1, Issue 3
- 177-210 The treatment effect of borders on trade. The great war and the disintegration of Central Europe
by Hans Christian Heinemeyer - 211-237 Anthropometric evidence on economic growth, biological well-being and regional convergence in the Habsburg Monarchy, c. 1850–1910
by John Komlos - 239-261 The effects of mid-career military enlistment on civilian career prospects: evidence from the Australian banking industry during World War II
by Andrew J. Seltzer
July 2007, Volume 1, Issue 2
- 91-114 Path dependence: a foundational concept for historical social science
by Paul A. David - 115-144 The Crash of 1882 and the Bailout of the Paris Bourse
by Eugene N. White - 145-175 Fluctuations in the momentum of growth within the capitalist epoch
by Angus Maddison
April 2007, Volume 1, Issue 1
- 1-6 What is ‘Cliometrica’?
by Dora Costa & Jean-Luc Demeulemeester & Claude Diebolt - 7-17 How much could economics gain from history: the contribution of cliometrics
by Jean-Luc Demeulemeester & Claude Diebolt - 19-44 Romer revisited: long-term changes in the cyclical sensitivity of unemployment
by John A. James & Mark Thomas