Content
2001
- 0137 Short-Term Loans and Long-Term Relationships: Relationship Lending in Early America
by Howard Bodenhorn - 0136 The Property Tax as a Coordinating Device: Financing Indiana's Mammoth Internal Improvement System, 1835 to 1842
by John Joseph Wallis - 0135 The Poor and the Dead: Socioeconomic Status and Mortality in the U.S., 1850-1860
by Joseph P. Ferrie - 0134 The Urban Mortality Transition in the United States, 1800-1940
by Michael R. Haines - 0133 What Caused the Crisis of 1839?
by John Joseph Wallis - 0132 A Wolfram in Sheep's Clothing: U.S. Economic Warfare in Spain, 1940-1944
by Leonard Caruana & Hugh Rockoff
2000
- 0131 Social Reformers and Regulation: The Prohibition of Cigarettes in the U.S. and Canada
by Lee J. Alston & Ruth Dupre & Tomas Nonnenmacher - 0130 Development, Health, Nutrition, and Mortality: The Case of the 'Antebellum Puzzle' in the United States
by Michael R. Haines & Lee A. Craig & Thomas Weiss - 0129 One Kind of Freedom: Reconsidered (and Turbo Charged)
by Roger L. Ransom & Richard Sutch - 0128 The Political Economy of Race, 1940-1964: The Adoption of State-Level Fair Employment Legislation
by William J. Collins - 0127 "Rain Follows the Plow" and Dryfarming Doctrine: The Climate Information Problem and Homestead Failure in the Upper Great Plains, 1890-1925
by Gary D. Libecap & Zeynep Kocabiyik Hansen - 0126 Conjectural Estimates of Economic Growth in the Lower South, 1720 to 1800
by Peter C. Mancall & Joshua L. Rosenbloom & Thomas Weiss - 0125 Aggregate Price Shocks and Financial Instability: An Historical Analysis
by Michael D. Bordo & Michael J. Dueker & David C. Wheelock - 0124 How Long Did It Take the United States to Become an Optimal Currency Area?
by Hugh Rockoff - 0123 South Carolina Slave Prices, 1722-1809
by Peter C. Mancall & Joshua L. Rosenbloom & Thomas Weiss - 0122 Wealth Inequality Trends in Industrializing New England: New Evidence and Tests of Competing Hypotheses
by Richard H. Steckel & Carolyn M. Moehling - 0121 Childhood Mortality & Nutritional Status as Indicators of Standard of Living: Evidence from World War I Recruits in the United States
by Michael R. Haines & Richard H. Steckel - 0120 Slave Prices in the Lower South, 1722-1815
by Peter C. Mancall & Joshua L. Rosenbloom & Thomas Weiss - 0068 Peopling the Pampa: On the Impact of Mass Migration to the River Plate, 1870-1914
by Alan M. Taylor
1999
- 0119 A Brief History of Education in the United States
by Claudia Goldin - 0118 Industrialization and Health in Historical Perspective
by Richard H. Steckel - 0117 Share Liquidity and Industrial Growth in an Emerging Market: The Case of New England, 1854-1897
by Peter L. Rousseau - 0116 Capital Goods Prices, Global Capital Markets and Accumulation, 1870-1950
by William J. Collins & Jeffrey G. Williamson - 0115 The Impact of Globalization on Pre-Industrial, Technologically Quiescent Economies
by Jeffrey G. Williamson - 0114 The Industrialization of New England, 1830 - 1880
by Peter Temin - 0113 The Challenges of Economic Maturity: New England, 1880 - 1940
by Joshua L. Rosenbloom
1998
- 0112 The Tallest in the World: Native Americans of the Great Plains in the Nineteenth Century
by Joseph M. Prince & Richard H. Steckel - 0111 Intra-Ethnic Diversity in Hispanic Child Mortality, 1890-1910
by Myron P. Gutmann & Michael R. Haines & W. Parker Frisbie & K. Stephen Blanchard - 0110 The Stability of the American Business Elite
by Peter Temin - 0109 Labor Market Integration Before the Civil War
by Robert A. Margo - 0108 Height, Weight, and Body Mass of the British Population Since 1820
by Roderick Floud - 0107 Health, Height, Nutrition, and Mortality: Evidence on the "Antebellum Puzzle" from Union Army Recruits in the Middle of the Nineteenth Century
by Michael R. Haines
1997
- 0106 Historical Perspectives on the Economic Consequences of Immigration into the United States
by Susan B. Carter & Richard Sutch - 0105 Operations of "Unfettered" Labor Markets at the Turn of the Century
by Price V. Fishback - 0104 The American Business Elite in Historical Perspective
by Peter Temin - 0103 Business Activity and the Boston Stock Market, 1835-1869
by Jeremy Atack & Peter L. Rousseau - 0102 Sears Roebuck in the Twentieth Century: Competition, Complementarities, and the Problem of Wasting Assets
by Daniel Raff & Peter Temin - 0101 Wages in California During the Gold Rush
by Robert A. Margo - 0100 Manufacturing Where Agriculture Predominates: Evidence from the South and Midwest in 1860
by Kenneth L. Sokoloff & Viken Tchakerian - 0099 Nutritional Status and Agricultural Surpluses in the Antebellum United States
by Lee A. Craig & Thomas Weiss - 0098 Inventors, Firms, and the Market for Technology in the Late Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries
by Naomi R. Lamoreaux & Kenneth L. Sokoloff - 0097 Debt, Default, and Revenue Structure: The American State Debt Crisis in the Early 1840s
by Arthur Grinath III & John Joseph Wallis & Richard Sylla - 0096 Latifundia as Malefactor in Economic Development? Scale, Tenancy, and Agriculture on the Pampas, 1880-1914
by Alan M. Taylor
1996
- 0095 The Political Economy of Workers' Compensation Benefit Levels, 1910-1930
by Price V. Fishback & Shawn Everett Kantor - 0094 The Efficiency Consequences of Institutional Change: Financial Market Regulation and Industrial Productivity Growth in Brazil, 1866-1934
by Stephen Haber - 0093 Immigrants and Natives: Comparative Economic Performance in the U.S., 1850-60 and 1965-80
by Joseph P. Ferrie - 0092 Explaining the Rise in Antebellum Pauperism: New Evidence
by Lynne L. Kiesling & Robert A. Margo - 0091 "Location, Location, Location!" The Market for Vacant Urban Land: New York 1835-1900
by Jeremy Atack & Robert A. Margo - 0090 What Determines the Allocation of National Government Grants to the States?
by John Joseph Wallis - 0089 Compulsory Schooling Legislation and School Attendance in Turn-of-the-Century America: A "Natural Experiment" Approach
by Robert A. Margo & T. Aldrich Finegan - 0088 The Entry Into the U.S. Labor Market of Antebellum European Immigrants, 1840-60
by Joseph P. Ferrie - 0087 Health, Height and Welfare: Britain 1700-1980
by Roderick Floud & Bernard Harris - 0086 Strikebreaking and the Labor Market in the United States, 1881-1874
by Joshua L. Rosenbloom - 0085 The Use of the Census to Estimate Childhood Mortality: Comparisons fromthe 1900 and 1910 United States Census Public Use Samples
by Michael R. Haines & Samuel H. Preston - 0084 America's Only Peacetime Inflation: The 1970s
by J. Bradford De Long - 0083 The Paradox of Planning: The Controlled Materials Plan of World War II
by John Landon-Lane & Hugh Rockoff - 0082 Were Free Southern Farmers "Driven to Indolence" by Slavery? A Stochastic Production Frontier Approach
by Elizabeth B. Field-Hendre & Lee A. Craig - 0081 Two Views of the British Industrial Revolution
by Peter Temin - 0080 Long Term Marriage Patterns in the United States from Colonial Times tothe Present
by Michael R. Haines - 0079 Financing the American Corporation: The Changing Menu of Financial Rela-tionships
by Charles W. Calomiris & Carlos D. Ramirez - 0078 The Extent of the Labor Market in the United States, 1850-1914
by Joshua L. Rosenbloom - 0067 A Comparison of the Stability and Efficiency of the Canadian and American Banking Systems 1870-1925
by Michael D. Bordo & Angela Redish - 0046 Land, Labor and the Wage-Rental Ratio: Factor Price Convergence in the Late Nineteenth Century
by Kevin O'Rourke & Alan M. Taylor & Jeffrey G. Williamsmn
1995
- 0077 From Plowshares to Swords: The American Economy in World War II
by Hugh Rockoff - 0076 Long-Term Trends in Health, Welfare, and Economic Growth in the United States
by Dora L. Costa & Richard H. Steckel - 0075 Percentiles of Modern Height Standards for Use in Historical Research
by Richard H. Steckel - 0074 Fixing the Facts: Editing of the 1880 U.S. Census of Occupations with Implications for Long-Term Trends and the Sociology of Official Statistics
by Susan B. Carter & Richard Sutch - 0073 Myth of the Industrial Scrap Heap: A Revisionist View of Turn-of-the- Century American Retirement
by Susan B. Carter & Richard Sutch - 0072 The Farm-Nonfarm Wage Gap in the Antebellum United States: Evidence fromthe 1850 and 1860 Censuses of Social Statistics
by Robert A. Margo - 0071 A New Sample of Americans Linked from the 1850 Public Use Micro Sampleofthe Federal Census of Population to the1860 Federal Census Manuscript Sched
by Joseph P. Ferrie - 0070 Fertility and Marriage in New York State in the Era of the Civil War
by Michael R. Haines & Avery M. Guest - 0069 Irregular Production and Time-out-of-Work in American Manufacturing Industry in 1870 and 1880: Some Preliminary Estimates
by Jeremy Atack & Fred Bateman
1994
- 0066 Factor Endowments: Institutions, and Differential Paths of Growth Among New World Economies: A View from Economic Historians of the United States
by Stanley L. Engerman & Kenneth L. Sokoloff - 0065 Cliometrics and the Nobel
by Claudia Goldin - 0064 A Prelude to the Welfare State: Compulsory State Insurance and Workers' Compensation in Minnesota, Ohio, and Washington, 1911-1919
by Shawn E. Kantor - 0063 The Price of Housing in New York City, 1830-1860
by Robert A. Mareo - 0062 The Great Depression
by Peter Temin - 0061 Was There a National Labor Market at the End of the Nineteenth Century? Intercity and Interregional Variation in Male Earnings in Manufacturing
by Joshua L. Rosenbloom - 0060 Three Phases of Argentine Economic Growth
by Alan M. Taylor - 0059 Estimated Life Tables for the United States, 1850-1900
by Michael R. Haines - 0058 Labor Markets in the Twentieth Century
by Claudia Goldin - 0057 Appendix to: "How America Graduated from High School, 1910 to 1960", Construction of State-Level Secondary School Data
by Claudia Goldin - 0056 The Population of the United States, 1790-1920
by Michael R. Haines - 0055 Agricultural Decline and the Secular Rise in Male Retirement Rates
by Dora L. Costa - 0054 The Relevance of Malthus for the Study of Mortality Today: Long-Run Influences on Health, Mortality, Labor Force Participation, and Population Growth
by Robert W. Fogel - 0053 Employer Recruitment and the Integration of Industrial Labor Markets 1870-1914
by Joshua L. Rosenbloom
1993
- 0052 The Meaning of Money in the Great Depression
by Hugh Rockoff - 0051 Explaining the Changing Dynamics of Unemployment: Evidence from Civil War Records
by Dora L. Costa - 0050 Price Wars and the Stability of Collusion: A Study of the Pre-World War I Bromine Industry
by Margaret Levenstein - 0049 Vertical Restraints in the Bromine Cartel: The Role of Distributors in Facilitating Collusion
by Margaret Levenstein - 0048 Mass Migration, Commodity Market Integration and Real Wage Convergence: The Late Nineteenth Century Atlantic Economy
by Jeffrey G, Williamson & Kevin O'Rourke & Timothy J. Hatton - 0047 Late-Comers to Mass Emigration: The Latin Experience
by Timothy J. Hatton & Jeffrey G. Williamson - 0045 Added and Discouraged Workers in the Late 1930s: A Re-Examination
by T. Aldrich Finegan & Robert A. Margo - 0044 Explaining Black-White Wage Convergence, 1940-1950: The Role of the Great Compression
by Robert A. Margo - 0026 New Sources and New Techniques for the Study of Secular Trends in Nutritional Status, Health, Mortality, and the Process of Aging
by Robert William Fogel - 0012 Problems in Modeling Complex Dynamic interactions: The Political Realignment of the 1850s
by Robert W. Fogel
1992
- 0043 What Drove the Mass Migrations from Europe in the Late Nineteenth Century?
by Timothy J. Hatton & Jeffrey G. Williamson - 0042 'Schemes of Practical Utility': Entrepreneurship and Innovation Among 'Great Inventors' in the United States, 1790-1865
by B. Zorina Khan & Kenneth L. Sokoloff - 0041 International Migration and World Development: A Historical Perspective
by Timothy J. Hatton & Jeffrey G. Williamson - 0040 The Labor Force in the Nineteenth Century
by Robert A. Margo - 0039 Tall But Poor: Nutrition, Health, and Living Standards in Pre-Famine Ireland
by S. Nicolas & Richard H. Steckel - 0038 Early Indicators of Later Work Levels, Disease, and Death
by Robert W. Fogel & Larry T. Wimmer - 0037 Were Heckscher and Ohlin Right? Putting the Factor-Price-Equalization Theorem Back into History
by Kevin O'Rourke & Jeffrey G. Williamson - 0036 The Evolution of Global Labor Markets Since 1830 Background Evidence and Hypotheses
by Jeffrey G. Williamson - 0035 Gresham's Law Regained
by Robert L. Greenfield - 0034 Toward a New Synthesis on the Role of Economic Issues in the Political Realignment of the 1850s
by Robert William Fogel
1991
- 0033 Whom Did Protective Legislation Protect? Evidence From 1880
by Jeremy Atack & Fred Bateman - 0032 Capital Flows to the New World as an Intergenerational Transfer
by Alan M. Taylor & Jeffrey G. Williamson - 0031 The Use of Historical Census Data for Mortality and Fertility Research
by Michael R. Haines - 0030 Agricultural Seasonality and the Organization of Manufacturing During Early Industrialization: The Contrast Between Britain and the United States
by Kenneth L. Sokoloff & David Dollar - 0029 The Rise of the Chicago Packers and the Origins of Meat Inspection and Antitrust
by Gary D. Libecap - 0028 The Market for Manufacturing Workers During Early Industrialization: The American Northeast, 1820 to 1860
by Kenneth L. Sokoloff & Georgia C. Villaflor - 0027 The Labor Force Participation of Older Americans in 1900: Further Results
by Robert A. Margo - 0025 Louis Brandeis, Work and Fatigue at the Start of the Twentieth Century: Prelude to Oregon's Hours Limitation Law
by Jeremy Atack & Fred Bateman - 0024 Stature and Living Standards in the United States
by Richard H. Steckel - 0023 Long Term Changes in U.S. Agricultural Output per Worker, 1800 to 1900
by Thomas Weiss - 0022 Precedence and Wealth: Evidence from Nineteenth Century Utah
by David W. Galenson & Clayne L. Pope - 0021 A Home of One's Own: Aging and Homeownership in the United States in the late Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries
by Michael R. Haines & Allen C. Goodman - 0020 Seasonality in Nineteenth Century Labor Markets
by Stanley Engerman & Claudia Goldin
1990
- 0019 Wages and Prices During the Antebellum Period: A Survey and New Evidence
by Robert A. Margo - 0018 The Microeconomics of Depression Unemployment
by Robert A. Margo - 0017 Segregated Schools and the Mobility Hypothesis: A Model of Local Government Discrimination
by Robert A. Margo - 0016 The Conquest of High Mortality and Hunger in Europe and America: Timing and Mechanisms
by Robert William Fogel - 0015 How Long Was the Workday in 1880?
by Jeremy Atack & Fred Bateman - 0014 The Competitive Dynamics of Racial Exclusion: Employment Segregation in the South, 1900-1950
by Robert A. Margo - 0013 Risk Sharing, Crew Quality, Labor Shares and Wages in the Nineteenth Century American Whaling Industry
by Lance E. Davis & Robert E. Gallman & Teresa D. Hutchins - 0011 The Capital Market in the 1850s
by Hugh Rockoff
1989
- 0010 The Democratization of Invention During Early Industrialization: Evidence from the United States, 1790-1846
by Kenneth L. Sokoloff & B. Zorina Khan - 0009 Lessons from the American Experience with Free Banking
by Hugh Rockoff - 0008 Poverty and Prosperity: A Longitudinal Study of Wealth Accumulation, 1850-1860
by Richard H. Steckel - 0007 Economic Growth Before 1860: Revised Conjectures
by Thomas Weiss - 0006 Consumer Behavior and Immigrant Assimilation: A comparison of the United States, Britain and Germany, 1889/1890
by Michael R. Haines - 0005 Buying the American Dream: Housing Demand in the United States in the Late Nineteenth Century
by Michael R. Haines & Allen C. Goodman - 0004 Economic and Geographic Mobility on the Farming Frontier: Evidence from Appanoose County, Iowa 1850-1870
by David W. Galenson & Clayne L. Pope - 0003 The Trend in the Rate of Labor Force Participation of Older Men, 1870-1930: A Review of the Evidence
by Roger L. Ransom & Richard Sutch - 0002 A State and Local Consumer Price Index for the United States in 1890
by Michael R. Haines - 0001 Second Thoughts on the European Escape from Hunger: Famines, Price Elasticities, Entitlements, Chronic Malnutrition, and Mortality Rates
by Robert W. Fogel