Description

This comprehensive and far-reaching book describes the growth and economic integration of the European economy from 1500 to 1913. The authors apply macroeconomic techniques to identify growth rates, inflation, product markets, trade networks and business cycles across a set of countries over the period.

The book demonstrates that growth was the natural state for European economies throughout the period although, under the impetus of the industrial revolution, growth rates generally accelerated by the end of the nineteenth century. Similarly, business cycles in the modern sense seem to have been in evidence at the beginning of the period but by the eighteenth century there is no doubt that modern cycles affected these countries, sometimes simultaneously. Inflationary episodes are both distinct and shared in this long period, with the long inflation of the sixteenth century attesting to the integration of European markets. Finally, the authors find abundant quantitative evidence to support the argument that economies linked by international trade in 1500 came close to achieving global integration by 1913.

The European Macroeconomy will be of interest to scholars of economic history, international economics and macroeconomics.

The European Macroeconomy: Growth, Integration and Cycles 1500–1913

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£129.00

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Hardback by Lee A. Craig , Douglas Fisher

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This comprehensive and far-reaching book describes the growth and economic integration of the European economy from 1500 to 1913. The... Read more

    Publisher: Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd
    Publication Date: 26/04/2000
    ISBN13: 9781852786434, 978-1852786434
    ISBN10: 1852786434

    Number of Pages: 400

    Non Fiction , Business, Finance & Law

    Description

    This comprehensive and far-reaching book describes the growth and economic integration of the European economy from 1500 to 1913. The authors apply macroeconomic techniques to identify growth rates, inflation, product markets, trade networks and business cycles across a set of countries over the period.

    The book demonstrates that growth was the natural state for European economies throughout the period although, under the impetus of the industrial revolution, growth rates generally accelerated by the end of the nineteenth century. Similarly, business cycles in the modern sense seem to have been in evidence at the beginning of the period but by the eighteenth century there is no doubt that modern cycles affected these countries, sometimes simultaneously. Inflationary episodes are both distinct and shared in this long period, with the long inflation of the sixteenth century attesting to the integration of European markets. Finally, the authors find abundant quantitative evidence to support the argument that economies linked by international trade in 1500 came close to achieving global integration by 1913.

    The European Macroeconomy will be of interest to scholars of economic history, international economics and macroeconomics.

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