History Matters: Essays on Economic Growth, Technology, and Demographic Change

History Matters: Essays on Economic Growth, Technology, and Demographic Change

History Matters: Essays on Economic Growth, Technology, and Demographic Change

History Matters: Essays on Economic Growth, Technology, and Demographic Change

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Overview

Combining theoretical work with careful historical description and analysis of new data sources, History Matters makes a strong case for a more historical approach to economics, both by argument and by example. Seventeen original essays, written by distinguished economists and economic historians, use economic theory and historical cases to explore how and why "history matters."

The chapters, which range in subject matter from the economic theory of irreversible investment to the nineteenth-century decline in U.S. rural fertility to the English poor law reform, are unified by three themes. The first explores the significance, causes, and consequences of path dependence in the evolution of technology and institutions. The second relates to the ways in which economic and political behavior are profoundly shaped and constrained by the cultural and political context inherited from history at a particular point in time. The final theme demonstrates the importance of integrating economic theory into historical research in the gathering and interpretation of data.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780804743983
Publisher: Stanford University Press
Publication date: 10/31/2003
Edition description: 1
Pages: 528
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 1.50(d)

About the Author

William A. Sundstrom is Professor of Economics at Santa Clara University. Timothy W. Guinnane is Professor of Economics at Yale University. Warren C. Whatley is Professor of Economics at the University of Michigan.

Table of Contents

List of Contributorsxi
Prefacexiii
Editors' Introduction1
Part IWhy History Matters: Path Dependence and Economic Thought
Chapter 1Path Dependence and Competitive Equilibrium23
Chapter 2Path Dependence and Reswitching in a Model of Multi-Technology Adoption36
Chapter 3Path Dependence, Network Form, and Technological Change63
Chapter 4The Tension between Strong History and Strong Economics96
Part IIPath Dependence in Practice
Chapter 5Financial History and the Long Reach of the Second Thirty-Years' War115
Chapter 6Path Dependence in Action: The Adoption and Persistence of the Korean Model of Economic Development142
Chapter 7Continuing Confusion: Entry Prices in Telecommunications163
Chapter 8After the War Boom: Reconversion on the Pacific Coast, 1943-1949187
Chapter 9Standardization, Diversity, and Learning in China's Nuclear Power Program221
Part IIIContext Matters: The Influence of Culture, Geography, and Political Institutions on Economies and Policies
Chapter 10Incentives, Information, and Welfare: England's New Poor Law and the Workhouse Test245
Chapter 11Family Matters: The Life-Cycle Transition and the Antebellum American Fertility Decline271
Chapter 12Building "Universal Service" in the Early Bell System: The Coevolution of Regional Urban Systems and Long-Distance Telephone Networks328
Chapter 13International Competition for Technology Investments: Does National Ownership Matter?364
Part IVEvidence Matters: Measuring Historical Economic Growth and Demographic Change
Chapter 14Conjectural Estimates of Economic Growth in the Lower South, 1720 to 1800389
Chapter 15The Value-Added Approach to the Measurement of Economic Growth425
Chapter 16A User's Guide to the Joys and Pitfalls of Cohort Parity Analysis459
Chapter 17Stochastic Dynamic Optimization Models with Random Effects in Parameters: An Application to Age at Marriage and Life-Cycle Fertility Control in France Under the Old Regime483
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