The Journal of Economic History: The tasks of economic history
New York, Economic History Association
Quadrimestrale; dal 1951 Trimestrale
ISSN: 0022-0507
Conservata in: Università degli Studi di Firenze, Biblioteca di Scienze Sociali:
– Punto di servizio: Economia, Riv. Str. 0264
Consistenza: a. 1, 1941-
– Punto di servizio: Scienze Politiche, Riv. Str. 0330
Consistenza: 21(1961) -23(1963); 32(1972) –
Lacune: 1961-1963, 1978; 2005, 3, 4; 2006, 1;
Conservata in: Prato, Istituto culturale e di documentazione Lazzerini – Fondo Melis
Consistenza: n. 1, 1941: 5, 1945; 20/2, 1960; 21/3, 1961
[ 2030-2021 ] [ 2020-2011 ] [ 2010-2001 ] [ 2000-1991 ] [ 1990-1981 ] [ 1980-1971 ] [ 1970-1961 ] [ 1960-1951 ] [ 1950-1941 ]
Angela Redish, The Evolution of the Gold Standard in England,
p. 789
Loren Brandt, Barbara Sands, Beyond Malthus and Ricardo: Economic
Growth, Land Concentration, and Income Distribution in Early
Twentieth-Century Rural China, p. 807
Sumner J. La Croix, James Roumasset, The Evolution of Private
Property in Nineteenth-Century Hawaii, p. 829
Anne M. Carlos, Stephen Nicholas, Agency Problems in Early
Chartered Companies: The Case of the Hudson’s Bay Company, p. 853
David Greasly, Fifty Years of Coal-mining Productivity: The
Record of the British Coal Industry before 1939, p. 877
Carol E. Heim, The Treasury As Developer-Capitalist? British
New town Building in the 1950s, p. 903
NOTES AND DISCUSSION
Martin A. Garrett, Jr., The Mule in Southern Agriculture:
A Requiem, p. 925
Mark Overton, Re-estimating Crop Yields from Probate Inventories:
A Comment, p. 931
Anthony Patrick O’Brien, Were Businessmen Afraid of FDR? A
Comment on Mayer and Chatterji, p. 936
Thomas Mayer, Monojit Chatterji, Reply to O’Brien, p. 942
Editors’ Notes, p. 945
Reviews of Books, p. 948
ARTICLES
David Eltis, Welfare Trends among the Yoruba in the Early
Nineteenth Century The Anthropometric Evidence, p. 521
Robin Cowan, Nuclear Power Reactors: A Study in Technological
Lock-in, p. 541
Mark Harrison, The Volume of Soviet Munitions Output, 1937-1945:
A Reevaluation, p. 569
John C. Brown, The Condition of England and the Standard of
Living: Cotton Textiles in the Northwest, 1806-1850, p. 591
Jean-Laurent Rosenthal, The Development of Irrigation in Provence,
1700-1860: The French Revolution and Economic Growth, p. 615
Steven J. Novak, The Real Takeover of the BIA: The Preferential
Hiring of Indians, p. 639
NOTES AND DISCUSSION
M: K: Thornton, R. L. Thornton, The Financial Crisis of A.D.
33: A Keynesian Depression?, p. 655
Metin M. Cosgel, Scattering and Contracts in Medieval Agriculture:
Challenges Ahead, p. 663
Bruce W. Hetherington, Bank Entry and the Low Issue of National
Bank Notes: A Re-examination, p. 669
José Manuel Campa, Exchange Rates and Economic Recovery
in the 1930s: An Extension Latin America, p. 677
Michael H, Disintegration in Lancashire: A Comment on Temin, p. 683
Peter Temin, Product Quality and Vertical Integration in the
Early Cotton Textile Industry: A Reply, p. 691
Bruce G. Carruthers, Politics, Popery. and Property. A Comment
on North and Weingast, p. 693
REVIEW ARTICLE
Allan G. Bogue, Fogel’s Journey through the Slave States, p. 699
Editors’ Notes, p. 711
Reviews of Books, p. 713
PAPERS PRESENTED AT THE FORTY-NINTH ANNUAL MEETING OF ECONOMIC
HISTORY ASSOCIATION
Robert B. Barsky, J. Bradford De Long, Bull and Bear Markets
in the Twentieth Century, p. 265
Charles W. Calomiris, In Deposit Insurance Necessary? A Historical
Perspective, p. 283
Peter Temin, Socialism and Wages in the Recovery from the
Great Depression in the United States and Germany, p. 297
William A. Sundstrom, Was There a Golden Age of Flexible Wages?
Evidence from Ohio Manufacturing, 1892-1910, p. 309
Jeffrey A. Miron, Christina D. Romer, A New Monthly Index
of Industrial Production, 1884-1940, p. 321
Ruth Dupré, Regulation the Quebec Dairy Industry, 1905-1921:
Peeling Off the Joseph Label, p. 339
Richard J. Sullivan, The Revolution of Ideas: Widespread Patenting
and Invention During the English Industrial Revolution, p. 349
Kenneth L. Sokoloff, B. Zorina Khan, The Democratization of
Invention During Early Industrialization: Evidence from the United
States, 1790-1846, p. 363
Martha Ellen Shiells, Collective Choice of Working Conditions:
Hours in British and U. S. Iron and Steel, 1890-1923, p. 379
Robert Whaples, Winning the Eight-Hour Day, 1909-1919, p. 393
Michael A. Bernstein, American Economic Expertise from the
Great War to the Cold War: Some Initial Observations, p.
407
Ann Mari May, President Eisenhower, Economic Policy, and the
1960 Presidential Election, p. 417
NOTES AND DISCUSSION
David Mitch, The Role of the Textbook in Undergraduate Economic
History Courses: Indispensable tool or Superficial Convenience?, p. 428
SUMMARIES OF DOCTORAL DISSERTATIONS
Lee A. Craig, Farm Output, Productivity, and Fertility Decline
in the Antebellum Northern United States, p. 432
Adrienne D. Hood, Organization and Extent of Textile Manufacture
in Eighteenth-Century Rural Pennsylvania: A Case Study of Chester
County, p. 434
Daniel Barbezat, International Cooperation and Domestic Cartel
Control: The International Steel Cartel, 1926-1938, p. 436
Jean-Laurent Rosenthal, The Fruits of Revolution: Property
Rights, Litigation, and French Agriculture, 1700-1860, p. 438
Joshua L. Rosenbloom, Labor Market Institutions and the Geographic
Integration of Labor Markets in the Late Nineteenth-Century United
States, p. 440
Susan Wolcott, Keynes vs. Churchill: British Unemployment
in the Twenties, p. 442
Philip T. Hoffman, Roger L. Ransom, Discussion, p. 444
Editors’ Notes, p. 450
Reviews of Books, p. 455
ARTICLES
Susan B. Carter, Elizabeth Savoca, Labor Mobility and Lengthy
Jobs in Nineteenth-Century America, p. 1
Jane Humphries, Enclosures, Common Rights, and Women: The
Proletarianization of Families in the Late Eighteenth and Early
Nineteenth Centuries, p. 17
Warren C. Whatley, Getting a Foot in the Door: “Learning”, State Dependence, and the Racial Integration of Firms, p.
43
Nachum I. Gross, Israeli Economic Policies, 1948-1951: Problems
of Evaluation, p. 67
Joshua L. Rosenbloom, One Market or Many? Labor Market Integration
in the Late Nineteenth-Century United States, p. 85
Robert A. Black, Claire G. Gilmore, Crowding Out during Britain’s
Industrial Revolution, p. 109
George K. Davis, Gary M. Pecquet, Interest Rates in the Civil
War South, p. 133
Edwin S. Hunt, A New Look at the Dealings of the Bardi and
Peruzzi with Edward III, p. 149
NOTES AND DISCUSSION
Margaret Patterson, David Reiffen, The Effect of the Bubble
Act on the Market for Joint Stock Shares, p. 163
REVIEW ARTICLE
Joel Mokyr, John a. C. Nye, La Grande Quantification, p. 172
Editors’ Notes, p. 177
Reviews of Books, p. 182
Douglass C. North, Barry R. Weingast, Constitutions and
Commitment: The Evolution of Institutions Governing Public Choice
in Seventeenth-Century England, p. 803
Gary D. Libecap, The Political Economy of Crude Oil Cartelization
in the United States, 1933 – 1972, p. 833
Avner Greif, Reputation and Coalitions in Medieval Trade:
Evidence on the Maghribi Traders, p. 857
Douglas Fisher, The Price Revolution: A Monetary Interpretation, p. 883
Donald Cox, John Vincent Nye, Male-Female Wage Discrimination
in Nineteenth-Century France, p. 903
David R. Meyer, Midwestern Industrialization and the American
Manufacturing Belt in the Nineteenth Century, p. 921
John R. Hanson II, Education, Economic Development, and Technology
Transfer: A Colonial Test, p. 939
NOTES AND DISCUSSION
Kenneth Ng, Nancy Virts, The Value of Freedom, p. 958
Jonathan B. Pritchett, The Burden of Negro Schooling: Tax
Incidence and Racial Redistribution in Postbellum North Carolina, p. 966
Jack Carr, Sherry Glied, Frank Mathewson, Unlimited Liability
and Free Banking in Scotland: A Note, p. 974
Gregory Clark, Productivity Growth without Technical Change
in European Agriculture: Reply to Komlos, p. 979
REVIEW ARTICLE
Osamu Saito, Bringing the Covert Structure of the Past to
Light, p. 992
Editors’ Notes, p. 1000
Reviews of Books, p. 1004
Eugene Nelson White, Was There a Solution to the Ancien
Regime’s Financial Dilemma?, p. 545
Peter J. Wylie, Technological Adaptation in Canadian Manufacturing,
1900 – 1929, p. 569
Thomas K. McCraw, Forest Reinhardt, Losing to Win: U.S. Steel’s
Pricing, Investment Decisions, and Market Share, 1901 – 1938, p. 593
Douglas Fisher, Walter N. Thurman, Sweden’s Financial Sophistication
in the Nineteenth Century: An Appraisal, p. 621
David W. Galenson, Clayne L. Pope, Economic and Geographic
Mobility on the Farming Frontier: Evidence From Appanoose County,
Iowa, 1850 – 1870, p. 635
Ulrich Blum, Leonard Dudley, A Spatial Approach to Structural
Change: The Making of the French Hexagon, p. 657
Christopher Grandy, New Jersey Corporate Chartermongering,
1875 – 1929, p. 677
NOTES AND DISCUSSION
Marshall Sarnat, The Emergence of Israel’s Security Market:
A Note, p. 693
Thomas C. Owen, A Standard Ruble of Account far Russian Business
History, 1769 – 1914: A Note, p. 699
Gregory Clark, Why Isn’t the Whole World Developed? A Reply
to Hanson, p. 707
Donald Hoke, British and American Horology: A Reply to Bolino, p. 715
REWIEV ARTICLE
Joachim F. E. Bläsing, Promising and Stimulation: Modern
Business History in Germany and Netherlands, p. 720
Editors’ Notes, p. 725
Reviews of Books, p. 727
THE TASKS OF ECONOMIC HISTORY
PAPERS PRESENTED AT THE FORTY-EIGHTH ANNUAL TING OF THE ECONOMIC
HISTORY ASSOCIATION
Jacob M. Price (Presidential Address), What Did Merchants
Do? Reflections on British Overseas Trade, 1660 – 1790, p. 267
David Feeny, The Decline of Property Rights in Man in Thailand,
1800 – 1913, p. 285
Kerry A. Odell, The Integration of Regional and Interregional
Capital Markets: Evidence from the Pacific Coast States, 1883
– 1913, p. 297
Mary M. Schweitzer, State-Issued Currency and the Ratification
of the U.S. Constitution, p. 311
Kenneth Lipartito, System Building on the Margin: The Problem
of Public Choice in the Telephone Industry, p. 323
Bernard Elbaum, Why Apprenticeship Persisted in Britain But
Not in the United States, p. 337
Jerome C. Rose, Biological Consequences of Segregation and
Economic Deprivation: A Post-Slavery Population from Southwest
Arkansas, p. 351
Richard N. Langlois, Paul L. Robertson, Explaining Vertical
Integration: Lessons from the American Automobile Industry, p. 361
Martha L. Olney, Credit as a Production-Smoothing Device:
The Case of Automobiles, 1913 – 1938, p. 377
Lorena S. Walsh, Plantation Management in the Chesapeake,
1620 – 1820, p. 393
Lois Green Carr, Russell R. Menard, Land, Labor, and Economies
of Scale in Early Maryland: Some Limits to Growth in the Chesapeake
System of Husbandry, p. 407
Lon L. Peters, Managing Competition in Germany Coal, 1893
– 1913, p. 419
Daniel Barbezat, Cooperation and Rivalry in the International
Steel Cartel, 1926 – 1932, p. 435
SUMMARIES OF DOCTORAL DISSERTATIONS
Helen Shapiro, State Intervention and Industrialization: The
Origins of the Brazilian Automotive Industry, p. 448
John C. Brown, Reforming the Urban Environment: Sanitation,
Housing, and Government Intervention in Germany, 1870 – 1910, p. 450
Timothy Guinnane, Migration, Marriage, and Household Formation:
The Irish at the Turn of the Century, p. 452
Ali I. Saad, Schooling and Occupational Choice in Nineteenth-Century
America, p. 454
Colleen M. Callahan, Movements in Aggregate Price Uncertainty
in the United States, 1884 – 1981, p. 457
David C. Wheelock, The Strategy and Consistency of Federal
Reserve Monetary Policy, 1919 – 1933, p. 459
Jon S. Cohen, Warren Whatley, Discussion, p. 461
Editors’ Notes, p. 469
Reviews of Books, p. 473
Lawrence H. Officer, The Remarkable Efficiency of the Dollar-Sterling
Gold Standard, 1890 – 1906, p. 1
George Grantham, Agricultural Supply During the Industrial
Revolution: French Evidence and European Implications, p. 43
David L. Carlton, Peter A. Coclanis, Capital Mobilization
and Southern Industry, 1880 – 1905 : The Case of the Carolina
Piedmont, p. 73
David R. Weir, tontines, Public Finance, and Revolution in
France and England, 1688 – 1789, p. 95
Price a. Fishback, Dieter Lauszus, The Quality of Services
in Company towns: Sanitation in Coal towns During the 1920s, p. 125
Donald F. Schaefer, Locational Choice in the Antebellum South, p. 145
NOTES AND DISCUSSION
Joshua L. Rosenbloom, Is Wage Rate Dispersion a Good Index
of Labor Market Integration? A Comment on Rothenberg, p. 166
Roger L. Ransom, Richard Sutch, The Trend in the Rate of Labor
Force Participation of Older Men, 1870 – 1930: A Reply to Moen, p. 170
REVIEW ARTICLE
George Grantham, Jean Meuvret and the Subsistence Problem
in Early Modern France, p. 184
Editors’ Notes, p. 201
Reviews of Books, p. 205
Kenneth L. Sokoloff, Inventive Activity in Early Industrial
America: Evidence from Patent Records, 1790 – 1846, p. 813
C. Knick Harley, Ocean Freight Rates and Productivity, 1740-1913:
The Primacy of Mechanical Invention Reaffirmed, p. 851
Kenneth Ng, Free Banking Laws and Barriers to Entry in Banking,
1838 – 1860, p. 877
Peter Temin, Product Quality and Vertical Integration in the
Early Cotton Textile Industry, p. 891
Editors’ Notes, p. 908
Reviews of Books, p. 914
Winifred B. Rothenberg, The Emergence of Farm Labor Markets
and the Transformation of the Rural Economy: Massachusetts, 1750
– 1855, p. 537
Robert E. Gallman, Changes in the Level of Literacy in a New
Community of Early America, p. 567
Farley Grubb, The Auction of Redemptioner Servants, Philadelphia,
1771 – 1804: An Economic Analysis, p. 583
Stefano Fenoaltea, International Resource Flows and Construction
Movements in the Atlantic Economy. The Kuznets Cycle in Italy,
1861 – 1913, p. 605
Anthony Patrick O’Brien, Factory Size, Economies of Scale,
and the Great Merger Wave of 1898 – 1902, p. 639
NOTES AND DISCUSSION
John Joseph Wallis, Douglass C. North, Should Transaction
Costs be Subtracted from Gross National Product?, 651
John Komlos, Agricultural Productivity in America and Eastern
Europe: A Comment, 655
August C. Bolino, British and American Horology: A Comment
on Hoke, p. 665
John R. Hanson II, Why Isn’t the Whole World Developed? A
Traditional View, p. 668
Carole Shammas, The Food Budget of English Workers: A Reply
to Komlos, p. 673
John Vincent Nye, Game Theory and the North American Fur Trade:
A Comment, p. 677
Ann M. Carlos, Elizabeth Hoffman, Game Theory and the North
American Fur Trade: A Reply, p. 681
Ron Michener, Backing Theories and the Currencies of Eighteenth-Century
America: A Comment, p. 682
Charles W. Calomiris, The Depreciation of the Continental:
A Reply, p. 693
REVIEW ARTICLE
Charles Feinstein, The Rise and Fall of the Williamson Curve, p. 699
Editors’ Notes, p. 730
Reviews of Books, p. 733
THE TASKS OF ECONOMIC HISTORY
PAPERS PRESENTED AT THE FORTY-SEVENTH ANNUAL MEETING OF THE
ECONOMIC HISTORY ASSOCIATION
Louis Galambos (Presidential Address), What Have CEOs Been
Doing?, p. 243
David F. Weiman, Urban Growth on the Periphery of the Antebellum
Cotton Belt: Atlanta, 1847 – 1860, p. 259
Kenneth A. Snowden, Mortgage Lending and American Urbanization,
1880 – 1890, p. 273
Jane Knodell, Interregional Financial Integration and the
Banknote Market: The Old Northwest, 1815 – 1845, p. 287
Eric S. Schubert, Innovations, Debts, and Bubbles: International
Integration of Financial Markets in Western Europe, 1688 – 1720, p. 299
John C. Brown, Coping with Crisis: The Diffusion of Waterworks
in Late Nineteenth-Century German towns, p. 307
George R. Boyer, What Did Unions Do in Nineteenth-Century
Britain?, p. 319
Richard H. Steckel, The Health and Mortality of Women and
Children, 1850 – 1860, p. 333
John B. Legler, Richard Sylla, John J. Wallis, U.S. City Finances
and the Growth of Government, 1850 – 1902, p. 347
Pim Kooij, Peripheral Cities and Their Regions in the Dutch
Urban System until 1900, p. 357
Edward Peter Fitzgerald, Did France’s Colonial Empire Make
Economic Sense? A Perspective from the Postwar Decade, 1946 –
1956, p. 373
Daniel M. G. Raff, Wage Determination Theory and the Five-Dollar
Day at Ford, p. 387
Boris a. Anan’Ich, The Russian Private Banking Houses, 1870
– 1914, p. 401
SUMMARIES OF DOCTORAL DISSERTATIONS
Eric S. Schubert, The Ties That Bound: Market Behavior in
Foreign Exchange in Western Europe during the Eighteenth Century, p. 409
Francesco L. Galassi, Reassessing Mediterranean Agriculture:
Stagnation and Growth in Tuscany, 1870 – 1914, p. 410
Judith A. Miller, The Pragmatic Economy: Liberal Reforms and
the Grain Trade in Upper Normandy, 1750 – 1789, p. 412
Anthony O’Brien, Prosperity and Depression, 1893 – 1933, p. 415
Sally Clarke, Farmers as Entrepreneurs: Regulation and Innovation
in American Agriculture during the Twentieth Century, p. 416
Kenneth Lipartito, The Telephone in the South: A Comparative
Analysis, 1877 – 1920, p. 419
Barry Eichengreen, Maris Vinovskis, Discussion, p. 421
REVIEW ARTICLE
William N. Parker, Old Themes and New Techniques, Part I, p. 428
David R. Weir, Old Themes and New Techniques, Part II, p. 435
Editors’ Notes, p. 438
Reviews of Books, p. 442
Gerald Friedman, Strike Success and Union Ideology: The
United States and France, 1880 – 1914, p. 1
Gloria L. Main, Jackson T. Main, Economic Growth and the Standard
of Living in Southern New England, 1640-1774, p. 27
Charles W. Calomiris, Institutional Failure, Monetary Scarcity,
and the Depreciation of the Continental, p. 47
Joel Mokyr, Is There Still Life in the Pessimist Case? Consumption
during the Industrial Revolution, 1790-1850, p. 69
Robert C. Allen, Cormac Ó Gráda, On the Road
Again with Arthur Young: English, Irish, and French Agriculture
during the Industrial Revolution, p. 93
Robert C. Allen, Inferring Yields from Probate Inventories, p. 117
James T. Campen, Anne Mayhew, The National Banking System
and Southern Economic Growth: Evidence from One Southern City,
1870-1900, p. 127
NOTES AND DISCUSSION
George Karatzas, The Greek Hyperinflation and Stabilization
of 1943-1946: A Comment on Makinen, p. 138
Gail E. Makinen, The Greek Hyperinflation and Stabilization
of 1943-1946: A Reply, p. 140
Gregory Clark, Can Management Develop the World? Reply to
Wilkins, p. 143
John Komlos, The Food Budget of English Workers: A Comment
on Shammas, p. 149
REVIEW ARTICLE
Robert S. DuPlessis, Urban History, Urbanization, and Economic
History, p. 150
Editors’ Notes, p. 155
Reviews of Books, p. 160
Robert A. Margo, Georgia C. Villaflor, The Growth of Wages
in Antebellum America: New Evidence, p. 873
John Komlos, The Height and Weight of West Point Cadets. Dietary
Change in Antebellum America, p. 897
Jane Humphries, “… The Most Free From Objection
…” The Sexual Division of Labor and Women’s Work in
Nineteenth-Century England, p. 929
Susan P. McCaffray, Origins of Labor Policy in the Russian
Coal and Steel Industry, 1874-1900, p. 951
Derek Matthews, The Technical Transformation of the Late Nineteenth-Century
Gas Industry, p. 967
NOTES AND DISCUSSION
Mira Wilkins, Efficiency and Management: A Comment on Gregory
Clark’s “Why Isn’t the Whole World Developed?”, p. 981
Nancy Virts, Estimating the Importance of the Plantation System
to Southern Agriculture in 1880, p. 984
Editors’ Notes, p. 989
Reviews of Books, p. 992
Mary MacKinnon, English Poor Law Policy and the Crusade
Against Outrelief, p. 603
David F. Weiman, Farmers and the Market in Antebellum America:
A View from the Georgia Upcountry, p. 627
John Vincent Nye, Firm Size and Economic Backwardness: A New
Look at the French Industrialization Debate, p. 649
Kenneth A. Snowden, Mortgage Rates and American Capital Market
Development in the Late Nineteenth Century, p. 671
John L. Neufeld, Price Discrimination and the Adoption of
the Electricity Demand Charge, p. 693
Loren Brandt, Farm Household Behavior, Factor Markets, and
the Distributive Consequences of Commercialization in Early Twentieth-Century
China, p. 711
Barrie A. Wigmore, Was the Bank Holiday of 1933 Caused by
a Run on the Dollar?, p. 739
NOTES AND DISCUSSION
Barry Eichengreen, Agricultural Mortgages in the Populist
Era: Reply to Snowden, p. 757
Jon Moen, The Labor of Older Men: A Comment, p. 761
REVIEW ARTICLES
Evsey Domar, Kahan on Russian Economic History, p. 769
James E. Cronin, The Wisdom of Conventional Wisdom, p. 775
Editors’ Notes, p. 778
Reviews of Books, p. 780
THE TASKS OF ECONOMIC HISTORY
PAPERS PRESENTED AT THE FORTY-SIXTH ANNUAL MEETING OF THE
ECONOMIC HISTORY ASSOCIATION
Stuart Bruchey (Presidential Address), Economy and Society
in an Earlier America, p. 299
Donald Hoke, British and American Horology: Time to Test Factor
Substitution Models, p. 321
Daniel Nelson, Mass Production and the U.S. Tire Industry, p. 329
Leonard S. Reich, Edison, Coolidge, and Langmuir: Evolving
Approaches to American Industrial Research, p. 341
Peter Hayes, Carl Bosch and Carl Krauch: Chemistry and the
Political Economy of Germany, 1925-1945, p. 353
Carol E. Heim, R & D, Defense, and Spatial Divisions of
Labor in Twentieth-Century Britain, p. 365
Roger L. Ransom, Richard Sutch, Tontine Insurance and the
Armstrong Investigation: A Case of Stifled Innovation, 1868-1905, p. 379
Richard Sylla, John B. Legler, John J. Wallis, Banks and State
Public Finance in the New Republic: The United States, 1790-1860, p. 391
Michael D. Bordo, Angela Redish, Why Did the Bank of Canada
Emerge in 1935?, p. 405
Gregory Clark, Productivity Growth without Technical Change
in European Agriculture before 1850, p. 419
Ross Thomson, Learning by Selling and Invention: The Case
of the Sewing Machine, p. 433
Peter J. George, Richard J. Preston, “Going in Between”:
The Impact of European Technology on the Work Patterns of the
West Main Cree of Northern Ontario, p. 447
Richard Roberts, French Colonialism, Imported Technology,
and the Handicraft Textile Industry in the Western Sudan, 1898-1918, p. 461
Alexander J. Field, Modern Business Enterprise as a Capital-Saving
Innovation, p. 473
SUMMARIES OF DOCTORAL DISSERTATIONS
Carolyn C. Cooper, Thomas Blanchard’s Patent Management, p. 487
Martha L. Olney, Advertising, Consumer Credit, and the “Consumer
Durables Revolution” of the 1920s, p. 489
Jonathan B. Pritchett, The Racial Division of Education Expenditures
in the South, 1910, p. 491
Stephen H. Haber, The Industrialization of Mexico, 1890-1940.
The Structure and Growth of Manufacturing in an Underdeveloped
Economy, p. 493
Aurel Schubert, The Credit-Anstalt Crisis of 1931: A Financial
Crisis Revisited, p. 495
Martha Shiells, Hours of Work and Shiftwork in the Early Industrial
Labor Markets of Great Britain, the United States, and Japan, p. 497
Glenn Porter, Larry Neal, Discussion, p. 501
NOTES AND DISCUSSION
Robert S. Gottfried, The Black Death: A Comment, p. 509
Editors’ Notes, p. 511
Review of Books, p. 516
Jacob M. Price, Paul G. E. Clemens, A Revolution of Scale
in Overseas Trade: British Firms in the Chesapeake Trade, 1675-1775, p. 1
Warren Whatley, Southern Agrarian Labor Contracts as Impediments
to Cotton Mechanization, p. 45
S.R.H. Jones, Technology, Transaction Costs, and the Transition
to Factory Production in the British Silk Industry, 1700-1870, p. 71
Larry Neal, The Integration and Efficiency of the London and
Amsterdam Stock Markets in the Eighteenth Century, p. 97
Carol E. Heim, Philip Mirowski, Interest Rates and Crowding-Out
during Britain’s Industrial Revolution, p. 117
Gregory Clark, Why Isn’t the Whole World Developed? Lessons
from the Cotton Mills, p. 141
Frank Lewis, Mary MacKinnon, Government Loan Guarantees and
the Failure of the Canadian Northern Railway, p. 175
Geofrey Mills, Hugh Rockoff, Compliance with Price Controls
in the United States and the United Kingdom during World War
II, p. 197
NOTES AND DISCUSSION
Jeffrey G. Williamson, Has Crowding Out Really Been Given
a Fair Test? A Comment, p. 214
Editors’ Notes, p. 217
Reviews of Books, p. 221
Jennifer Roback, The Political Economy of Segregation:
The Case of Segregated Streetcars, p. 893
Robert C. Stacey, Agricultural Investment and the Management
of the Royal Demesne Manors, 1236-1240, p. 919
E. H. Hunt, Industrialization and Regional Inequality: Wages
in Britain, 1760-1914, p. 935
Ann M. Carlos, Elizabeth Hoffman, The North American Fur Trade:
Bargaining to a Joint Profit Maximum under Incomplete Information,
1804-1821, p. 967
Michael Huberman, Invisible Handshakes in Lancashire: Cotton
Spinning in the First Half of the Nineteenth Century, p. 987
Morris Altman, Resource Endowments and Location Theory in
Economic History: A Case Study of Quebec and Ontario at the Turn
of the Twentieth Century, p. 999
Price a. Fishback, Did Coal Miners “Owe Their Souls to
the Company Store”? Theory and Evidence from the Early 1900s, p. 1011
REVIEW ARTICLE
Rondo Cameron, Was England Really Superior to France?, p. 1031
Editors’ Notes, p. 1040
Reviews of Books, p. 1044
David S. Landes, What Do Bosses Really Do?, p. 585
Donald R. Adams Jr., Prices and Wages in Maryland, 1750-1850, p. 625
Naomi R. Lamoreaux, Banks, Kinship, and Economic Development:
The New England Case, p. 647
Michael Turner, English Open Fields and Enclosures: Retardation
or Productivity Improvements, p. 669
Jeffrey G. Williamson, The Impact of the Irish on British
Labor Markets During the Industrial Revolution, p. 693
Richard H. Steckel, A Peculiar Population: The Nutrition,
Health, and Mortality of American Slaves from Childhood to Maturity, p. 721
Martin Brown, Peter Philips, Craft Labor and Mechanization
in Nineteenth-Century American Canning, p. 743
Eugene Smolensky, Municipal Financing of the U.S. Fine Arts
Museum: A Historical Rationale, p. 757
Steven B. Webb, Fiscal News and Inflationary Expectations
in Germany After World War I, p. 769
Gail E. Makinen, The Greek Hyperinflation and Stabilization
of 1943-1946, p. 795
Editors’ Notes, p. 807
Reviews of Books, p. 813
THE TASKS OF ECONOMIC HISTORY
PAPERS PRESENTED AT THE FORTY-FIFTH ANNUAL MEETING OF THE
ECONOMIC HISTORY ASSOCIATION
Stanley L. Engerman (Presidential Address), Slavery and
Emancipation in Comparative Perspective: A Look at Some Recent
Debates, p. 317
Christina Romer, New Estimates of Prewar Gross National Product
and Unemployment, p. 341
David R. Weir, The Reliability of Historical Macroeconomic
Data for Comparing Cyclical Stability, p. 353
Stanley Lebergott, Discussion, p. 367
Susan B. Carter, Occupational Segregation, Teachers’ Wages,
and American Economic Growth, p. 373
Moses Abramovitz, Catching Up, Forging Ahead, and Falling
Behind, p. 385
Farley Grubb, Redemptioner Immigration to Pennsylvania: Evidence
on Contract Choice and Profitability, p. 407
George R. Boyer, The Poor Law, Migration, and Economic Growth, p. 419
James W. Oberly, Westward Who? Estimates of Native White Interstate
Migration After the War of 1812, p. 431
Barry Eichengreen, Henry A. Gemery, The Earnings of Skilled
and Unskilled Immigrants al the End of the Nineteenth Century, p. 441
Milton Esbitt, Bank Portfolios and Bank Failures During the
Great Depression: Chicago, p. 455
Jeremy Atack, Firm Size and Industrial Structure in the United
States During the Nineteenth Century, p. 463
Trevor J. O. Dick, Consumer Behavior in the Nineteenth Century
and Ontario Workers, 1885-1889, p. 477
SUMMARIES OF DOCTORAL DISSERTATIONS
Donald Hoke, Ingenious Yankees, The Rise of the American System
of Manufactures in the Private Sector, p. 489
Kenneth Snowden, Three Essays on the American Capital Market,
1870-1913, p. 491
Christina Romer, The Instability of the Prewar Economy Reconsidered:
A Critical Examination of Historical Macroeconomic Data, p. 494
Gordon Boyce, The Growth and Dissolution of a Large-Scale
Business Enterprise: The Furness Interest, 1892-1919, p. 496
Gregory Clark, British Labor in Britain’s Decline, p. 498
Mary MacKinnon, Poverty and Policy: The English Poor Law,
1860-1910, p. 500
W. Elliot Brownlee, Michael Edelstein, Discussion, 503
REVIEW ARTICLE
Jon S. Cohen, Marxism in a Nutshell, p. 515
Editors’ Notes, p. 521
Reviews of Books, p. 526
Roger L. Ransom, Richard Sutch, The Labor of Older Americans:
Retirement off the Job, 1870-1937, p. 1
John M. Veitch, Repudiations and Confiscations by the Medieval
State, p. 31
Philip Hoffman, Taxes and Agrarian Lands in Early Modern France:
Land Sales, 1550-1730, p. 37
Richard H. Steckel, Richard A. Jensen, New Evidence on the
Causes of Slave and Crew Mortality in the Atlantic Slave Trade, p. 57
Robert A. McGuire, Robert L. Ohsfeldt, An Economic Model of
Voting Behavior over Specific Issues at the Constitutional Convention
of 1787, p. 79
George R. Boyer, The Old Poor Law and the Agricultural Labor
Market in Southern England: An Empirical Analysis, p. 113
David F. Good, Uneven Development in the Nineteenth Century:
A Comparison of the Habsburg Empire and the United States, p. 137
Louis P. Cain, Donald G. Paterson, Biased Technical Change,
Scale, and Factor Substitution in American Industry, 1850-1919, p. 153
Solomos Solomou, Non-Balanced Growth and Kondratieff Waves
in the World Economy, 1850-1913, p. 165
Ranald C. Michie, The London and New York Stock Exchanges,
1850-1914, p. 171
Robert A. Margo, Race, Educational Attainment, and the 1940
Census, p. 189
Willis Peterson, Yoav Kislev, The Cotton Harvester in Retrospect:
Labor Displacement or Replacement?, p. 199
NOTES AND DISCUSSION
Yasukichi Yasuba, Standard of Living in Japan Before Industrialization:
From What Level Did Japan Begin? A Comment, p. 217
Susan B. Hanley, Standard of Living in Nineteenth-Century
Japan: Reply to Yasuba, p. 225
REVIEW ARTICLE
Richard Roehl, The Ecclesiastical Economy of Medieval Europe, p. 227
Editors’ Notes, p. 232
Association Notes, p. 239
Reviews of Books, p. 247
Winifred B. Rothenberg, The Emergence of a Capital Market
in Rural Massachusetts, 1730-1838, p. 781
Marcello De Cecco, Monetary Theory and Roman History, p. 809
Kathleen Biddick, Medieval English Peasants and Market Involvement, p. 823
Hiram Caton, The Preindustrial Economics of Adam Smith,
p. 833
Farley Grubb, The Market for Indentured Immigrants: Evidence
on the Efficiency of Forward Labor Contracting in Philadelphia,
1745-1773, p. 855
Elmus Wicker, Colonial Monetary Standards Contrasted: Evidence
from the Seven Years’ War, p. 869
Michael Haines, Inequality in Childhood Mortality: A Comparison
of England and Wales, 1911, and the United States, 1900, p. 885
Thomas Mayer, Monojit Chatterji, Political Shocks and Investment:
Some Evidence from the 1930s, p. 913
Barry Eichengreen, Jeffrey Sachs, Exchange Rates and Economic
Recovery in the 1930s, p. 925
Susan J. Linz, Foreign Aid and Soviet Postwar Recovery, p. 947
NOTES AND DISCUSSION
Peter toumanoff, A Note on the Profitability of Serfdom, p. 955
Evsey Domar, Mark Machina, The Profitability of Serfdom: A
Reply, p. 960
REVIEW ARTICLES
Robert Triffin, Charles Calomiris, A Retrospective on the
Classical Gold Standard: Two Views, p. 963
Editors’ Notes969
Association Notes, p. 972
Reviews of Books, p. 974
John A. James, Jonathan S. Skinner, The Resolution of the
Labor-Scarcity Paradox, p. 513
John McDonald, G. D. Snooks, The Determinants of Manorial
Income in Domesday England: Evidence from Essex, p. 541
Lawrence H. Officer, Integration in the American Foreign-Exchange
Market. 1791-1900, p. 557
Thomas C. Owen, The Russian Industrial Society and Tsarist
Economic Policy, 1867-1905, p. 587
Bennett D. Baack, Edward John Ray, Special Interests and the
Adoption of the Income Tax in the United States, p. 607
Kent Osband, The Boll Weevil Versus “King Cotton”, p. 627
NOTES AND DISCUSSION
Robert Woods, The Effects of Population Redistribution on
the Level of Mortality in Nineteenth-Century England and Wales, p. 645
Gene Smiley, Banking Structure and the National Capital Market,
1869-1914: A Comment, p. 653
Marie Elizabeth Sushka, W. Brian Barrett, Banking Structure
and the National Capital Market, 1869-1914: A Reply, p. 661
Frederic L. Pryor, Climatic Fluctuations as a Cause of the
Differential Economic Growth of the Orient and Occident: A Comment, p. 667
E. L. Jones, Disasters and Economic Differentiation Across
Eurasia: A Reply, p. 675
Frederic L. Pryor, A Rejoinder, p. 683
A SYMPOSIUM ON THE ATLANTIC SLAVE TRADE
Raymond L. Cohn, Deaths of Slaves in the Middle Passage, p. 685
William Darity Jr., The Numbers Game and the Profitability
of the British Trade in Slaves, p. 693
Seymour Drescher, British Slavers: A Comment, p. 704
B. L. Anderson, David Richardson, Market Structure and the
Profits of the British African Trade in the Late Eighteenth Century:
A Rejoinder Rebutted, p. 705
J. E. Inikori, Market Structure and Profits: A Further Rejoinder, p. 708
REVIEW ARTICLES
William J. Hausman, British Coal, p. 712
Bent Hansen, Egypt Decolonialized, p. 716
Editors’ Notes, p.?
Reviews of Books, p. 724
THE TASKS OF ECONOMIC HISTORY
PAPERS PRESENTED AT THE FORTY-FOURTH ANNUAL MEETING OF THE
ECONOMIC HISTORY ASSOCIATION
Stanley Lebergott (Presidential Address), The Demand for
Land: The United States, 1820-1860, p. 181
Daniel Scott Smith, Notes on the Measurement of Values, p. 213
Larry Neal, Integration of International Capital Markets:
Quantitative Evidence from the Eighteenth to Twentieth Centuries, p. 219
David W. Galenson, Population Turnover in the English West
Indies in the Late Seventeenth Century: A Comparative Perspective, p. 227
Peter Lindert, Discussion, p. 237
Louis P. Cain, William Dean’s Theory of Urban Growth: Chicago’s
Commerce and Industry, 1854-1871, p. 241
Peter A. Coclanis, Bitter Harvest: The South Carolina Low
Country in Historical Perspective, p. 251
Lacy K. Ford, Self-Sufficiency, Cotton, and Economic Development
in the South Carolina Upcountry, 1800-1860, p. 260
William H. Phillips, Southern Textile Mill Villages on the
Eve of World War II: The Courtenay Mill of South Carolina, p. 269
Gary Gorton, Clearinghouses and the Origin of Central Banking
in the United States, p. 277
Eugene Nelson White, The Merger Movement in Banking, 1919
– 1933, p. 285
Kris Inwood, Productivity Growth in Obsolescence: Charcoal
Iron Revisited, p. 293
Robert R. MacMurray, Technological Change in a Society in
Transition: Work in Progress on a Unified Reference Work in Early
American Patent History, p. 299
Richard J. Sullivan, The Timing and Pattern of Technological
Development in English Agriculture, 1611-1850, p. 305
George Grantham, Discussion, p. 315
William K. Hutchinson, Import Substitution, Structural Change,
and Regional Economic Growth in the United States: The Northeast,
1870-1910, p. 319
Jacob Metzer, Oded Kaplan, Jointly but Severally: Arab-Jewish
Dualism and Economic Growth in Mandatory Palestine, p. 327
Leslie Hannah, Why Employer-Based Pension Plans? The Case
of Britain, p. 347
K. Celeste Gaspari, Arthur G. Woolf, Income, Public Works,
and Mortality in Early Twentieth-Century American Cities, p. 355
john W. Adams, Alice Bee Kasakoff, Wealth and Migration in
Massachusetts and Maine: 1771-1798, p. 363
Ben Baack, Edward Ray, The Political Economy of the Origins
of the Military-Industrial Complex in the United States, p. 369
Hugh Rockoff, The Origins of the Federal Budget, p. 377
Colin Forster, Unemployment and Minimum Wages in Australia,
1900-1930, p. 383
R. M. Hartwell, Discussion, p. 389
Andrew A. Beveridge, Local Lending Practice: Borrowers in
a Small Northeastern Industrial City, 1832-1915, p. 393
William Clark, Charlie Turner, International Trade and the
Evolution of the American Capital Market, 1888-1911, p. 405
Louis Ferleger, Capital Goods and Southern Economic Development, p. 411
John S. Lyons, Vertical Integration in the British Cotton
Industry, 1825-1850: A Revision, p. 419
Albion M. Urdank, Economic Decline in the English industrial
Revolution: The Gloucester Wool Trade, 1800-1840, p. 427
Leonard N. Rosenband, Productivity and Labor Discipline in
the Montgolfier Paper Mill, 1780-1805, p. 435
Herman Freudenberger, Discussion, p. 445
Susan Mosher Stuard, Medieval Workshop: toward a Theory of
Consumption and Economic Change, p. 447
SUMMARIES OF DOCTORAL DISSERTATIONS
George R. Boyer, The Economic Role of the English Poor Law,
1780-1834, p. 452
Jack A. Goldstone, Origins of the English Revolution: A Demographic
Approach, p. 454
William Mass, Technological Change and Industrial Relations:
The Diffusion of Automatic Weaving in the United States and Britain, p. 458
Mark Thomas, An Input-Output Approach to the British Economy,
1890-1914, p. 460
Mary M. Schweitzer, Contracts and Custom: Economic Policy
in Colonial Pennsylvania, p. 463
Larry Schweikart, Banking in the American South, 1836-1865, p. 465
Marlene H. Rikard, An Experiment in Welfare Capitalism: The
Health Care Services of the Tennessee Coal, iron and Railway
Company, p. 467
Joel Mokyr, Harold D. Woodman, Discussion, p. 471
Editors’ Notes, p. 480
Reviews of Books, p. 484
Ann Kussmaul, Agrarian Change in Seventeenth-Century England:
The Economic Historian as Paleontologist, p. 1
Debra Glassman, Angela Redish, New Estimates of the Money
Stock in France, 1493-1680, p. 31
Richard L. Rudolph, Agricultural Structure and Proto-Industrialization
in Russia: Economic Development With Unfree Labor, p. 47
David Weiman, The Economic Emancipation of the Non-Slaveholding
Class: Upcountry Farmers in the Georgia Cotton Economy, p. 71
Lee J. Alston, Joseph P. Ferrie, Labor Costs, Paternalism,
and Loyalty in Southern Agriculture: A Constraint on the Growth
of the Welfare State, p. 95
NOTES AND DISCUSSION
Jacob Metzer, How New Was the New ERA? The Public Sector in
the 1920s, p. 119
Anne Mayhew, Walter C. Neale, David W. Tandy, Markets in the
Ancient Near East: A Challenge to Silver’s Argument and Use of
Evidence, p. 127
Morris Silver, Karl Polanyi and Markets in the Ancient Near
East: Reply, p. 135
N. F. R. Crafts, English Workers’ Real Wages During the Industrial
Revolution: Some Remaining Problems, p. 139
Peter Lindert, Jeffrey Williamson, English Workers’ Real Wages:
A Reply to Crafts, p. 145
Editors’ Notes, p. 154
Reviews of Books, p. 159
Evsey D. Domar, Mark J. Machina, On the Profitability of
Russian Serfdom, p. 919
Gerald Epstein, Thomas Ferguson, Monetary Policy, Loan Liquidation,
and Industrial Conflict: The Federal Reserve and the Open Market
Operations of 1932, p. 957
Woodruff D. Smith, The Function of Commercial Centers in the
Modernization of European Capitalism: Amsterdam as an Information
Exchange in the Seventeenth Century, p. 985
Joan Underhill Hannon, Poverty in the Antebellum Northeast.
The View from New York State’s Poor Relief Rolls, p. 1007
Mark Bils, Tariff Protection and Production in the Early U.S.
Cotton Textile Industry, p. 1033
Rodney Maddock, Ian McLean, Supply-Side Shocks. The Case of
Australian Gold, p. 1047
Gregory Clark, Authority and Efficiency. The Labor Market
and the Managerial Revolution of the Late Nineteenth Century, p. 1069
NOTES AND DISCUSSION
Herman Freudenberger, Frances J. Mather, Clark Nardinelli, A
New Look at the Early Factory Labor Force, p. 1085
REVIEW ARTICLES
David Ludden, South Asia Cambridged in Economic Perspective, p. 1091
Joel Mokyr, And Thou, Happy Austria? A Review Essay, p. 1094
Editors’ Notes, p. 1100
Reviews of Books, p. 1105
Stefano Fenoaltea, Slavery and Supervision in Comparative
Perspective: A Model, p. 635
Mary Kilbourne Matossian, Mold Poisoning and Population Growth
in England and France, 1750-1850, p. 669
Jeffrey G. Williamson, Why Was British Growth So Slow During
the Industrial Revolution?, p. 687
Angela Redish, Why Was Specie Scarce in Colonial Economies?
An Analysis of the Canadian Currency, 1796-1830, p. 713
David Pope, Rostow’s Kondratieff Cycle in Australia, p. 729
Price Fishback, Segregation in Job Hierarchies: West Virginia
Coal Mining, 1906-1932, p. 755
Avi J. Cohen, Technological Change as Historical Process:
The Case of the U.S. Pulp and Paper Industry, 1915-1940, p. 775
NOTES AND DISCUSSION
Ari Y. Ben-Shachar, Demand versus Supply in the Industrial
Revolution: A Comment, p. 801
Joel Mokyr, Demand versus Supply in the Industrial Revolution:
A Reply, p. 806
Joan Underhill Hannon, The Generosity of Antebellum Poor Relief,
p. 810
Barry Eichengreen, Experience and the Male-Female Earning
Gap in the 1890s, p. 822
Paul L. Menchik, Is the Family Wealth Squandered? A Test of
the Merry- Widow Model, p. 835
REVIEW ARTICLE
Barbara L. Solow, Why Ireland Starved, p. 839
Editors’ Notes, p. 844
Reviews of Books, p. 848
THE TASKS OF ECONOMIC HISTORY
PAPERS PRESENTED AT THE FORTY-THIRD ANNUAL MEETING OF THE
ECONOMIC HISTORY ASSOCIATION
Alice Hanson Jones (Presidential Address), Wealth and Growth
of the Thirteen Colonies: Some Implications, p. 239
Douglass C. North, Government and the Cost of Exchange in
History, p. 255
Robert R. Keller, Ann Mari May, The Presidential Political
Business Cycle of 1972, p. 265
Peter D. McClelland, Discussion, p. 273
Lee J. Alston, Morton Owen Schapiro, Inheritance Laws Across
Colonies: Causes and Consequences, p. 277
Raymond L. Cohn, Mortality on Immigrant Voyages to New York,
1836-1853, p. 289
David Eltis, Mortality and Voyage Length in the Middle Passage:
New Evidence from the Nineteenth Century, p. 301
Philip T. Hoffman, The Economic Theory of Sharecropping in
Early Modern France, p. 309
William J. Hausman, Cheap Coals or Limitation of the Vend:
The London Coal Trade, 1770-1845, p. 321
Reed Geiger, Planning the French Canals: The “Becquey
Plan” of 1820-1822, p. 329
Joel Mokyr, Discussion, p. 341
Philip Mirowski, Macroeconomic Instability and the “Natural” Processes in Early Neoclassical Economics, p. 345
Wayne A. Lewchuk, The Role of the British Government in the
Spread of Scientific Management and Fordism in the Interwar Years, p. 355
Barry Eichengreen, Keynes and Protection, p. 363
Mark Thomas, Discussion, p. 375
Gary D. Libecap, The Political Allocation of Mineral Rights.
A Re-evaluation of Teapot Dome, p. 381
Arthur F. McEvoy, Harry N. Scheiber, Scientists, Entrepreneurs,
and the Policy Process: A Study of the Post 1945 California Sardine
Depletion, p. 393
Paul A. Tiffany, The Roots of Decline: Business-Government
Relations in the American Steel Industry, 1945-1960, p. 407
Michelle Burge McAlpin, Economic Policy and the True Believer:
The Use of Ricardian Rent Theory in the Bombay Survey and Settlement
System, p. 421
Carl E. Pray, The Impact of Agricultural Research in British
India, p. 429
J. Van Fenstermaker, John E. Filer, Robert Stanley Herren, Money
Statistics of New England, 1785-1837, p. 441
Edwin J. Perkins, Langdon Cheves and the Panic of 1819: A
Reassessment, p. 455
Marie Elizabeth Sushka, W. Brian Barrett, Banking Structure
and the National Capital Market, 1869-1914, p. 463
Michael A. Bernstein, A Reassessment of Investment Failure
in the Interwar American Economy, p. 479
Alexander J. Field, A New Interpretation of the Onset of the
Great Depression, p. 489
Steven B. Webb, The Supply of Money and Reichsbank Financing
of Government and Corporate Debt in Germany, 1919-1923, p. 499
Robert A. McGuire, Robert L. Ohsfeldt, Economic Interests
and the American Constitution. A Quantitative Rehabilitation
of Charles A. Beard, p. 509
Javier Cuenca Esteban, Trends and Cycles in U.S. Trade with
Spain and the Spanish Empire, 1790-1819, p. 521
Kenneth L. Sokoloff, Investment in Fixed and Working Capital
during Early Industrialization: Evidence from U.S. Manufacturing
Firms, p. 545
David Mitch, Underinvestment in Literacy? The Potential Contribution
of Government Involvement in Elementary Education to Economic
Growth in Nineteenth-Century England, p. 557
Bernard Elbaum, William Lazonick, The Decline of the British
Economy: An Institutional Perspective, p. 567
Carol E. Heim, Structural Transformation and the Demand for
New Labor in Advanced Economies Interwar Britain, p. 585
Lance Davis; Michael Edelstein, Discussion, p. 596
SUMMARIES OF DOCTORAL DISSERTATIONS
Enrique Cárdenas, Mexico’s Industrialization during
the Great Depression: Public Policy and Private Response, p. 603
Price a. Fishback, Employment Conditions of Blacks in the
Coal Industry, 1900-1930, p. 605
John Gandar, Economic Causation and British Emigration in
the Late Nineteenth Century, p. 608
Angela Redish, The Optimal Supply of Bank Money: Upper Canada’s
Experience on and off the Specie Standard, p. 610
David R. Weir, Fertility Transition in Rural France, 1740-1829, p. 612
Warren C. Whatley, Institutional Change and Mechanization
in the Cotton South, p. 614
John A. James, Discussion, p. 617
Editors’ Notes, p. 622
Association Notes, p. 626
Reviews of Books, p. 630
David W. Galenson, The Rise and Fall of Indentured Servitude
in the Americas: An Economic Analysis, p. 1
David R. Weir, Life Under Pressure: France and England, 1670-1870, p. 27
N. F. R. Crafts, Economic Growth in France and Britain, 1830-1910:
A Review of the Evidence, p. 49
Donald H. Kagin, Monetary Aspects of the Treasury Notes of
the War of 1812, p. 69
James H. Stock, Real Estate Mortgages, Foreclosures, and Midwestern
Agrarian Unrest, 1865-1920, p. 89
Sevket Pamuk, The Ottoman Empire in the “Great Depression” of 1873-1896, p. 107
Eugene Nelson White, A Reinterpretation of the Banking Crisis
of 1930, p. 119
John Joseph Wallis, The Birth of the Old Federalism: Financing
the New Deal, 1932-1940, p. 139
NOTES AND DISCUSSION
Harry T. Oshima, The Growth of U.S. Factor Productivity: The
Significance of New Technologies in the Early Decades of the
Twentieth Century, p. 161
Michael A. Bernstein, Sean Wilentz, Marketing, Commerce, and
Capitalism in Rural Massachusetts, p. 171
Winifred B. Rothenberg, Markets, Values, and Capitalism: A
Discourse on Method, p. 174
REVIEW ARTICLE
Roger F. Riefler, Development of the U.S. Urban System, p. 179
Editors’ Notes, p. 185
Reviews of Books, p. 190
Morris Silver, Karl Polanyi and Markets in the Ancient
Near East: The Challenge of the Evidence, p. 795
Gay L. Gullickson, Agriculture and Cottage Industry: Redefining
the Causes of Proto-Industrialization, p. 831
Donald F. Schaefer, The Effect of the 1859 Crop Year Upon
Relative Productivity in the Antebellum South, p. 851
Bent Hansen, Interest Rates and Foreign Capital in Egypt Under
British Occupation, p. 867
Lee J. Alston, Farm Foreclosures in the United States During
the Interwar Period, p. 885
Warren C. Whatley, Labor for the Picking: The New Deal in
the South, p. 905
Carol E. Heim, Industrial Organization and Regional Development
in Interwar Britain, p. 931
David C. Mowery, Industrial Research and Firm Size, Survival,
and Growth in American Manufacturing, 1921-1946: An Assessment, p. 953
NOTES AND DISCUSSION
Dennis O. Flynn, David J. St. Clair, The Social Returns to
Empire: A Note, p. 981
Lance E. Davis, Robert A. Huttenback, The Social Rate of Return:
A Note on a Note, p. 983
REVIEW ARTICLES
Peter H. Lindert, Remodeling British Economic History: A Review
Article, p. 986
Geoffrey Jones, Some Recent Histories of International Oil, p. 993
Thomas G. Rawski, New Sources for Studying China’s Economy,
p. 997
Editors’ Notes, p. 1003
Reviews of Books, p. 1008
Carl P. Parrini, Martin J. Sklar, New Thinking About the
Market, 1896-1904: me-Ainetican Economists on Investment and
the Theory of Surplus Capital, p. 559
Lawrence Officer, Dollar-Sterling Mint Parity and Exchange
Rates, 1791-1834, p. 579
Lee Soltow, Kentucky Wealth at the End of the Eighteenth Century,
p. 617
Stanley Engerman, Contract Labor, Sugar, and Technology in
the Nineteenth Century, p. 635
Peter Temin, Patterns of Cotton Agriculture in Post-Bellum
Georgia, p. 661
Stephen Nicholas, Agency Contracts, Institutional Modes, and
the Transition to Foreign Direct Investment by British Manufacturing
Multinationals Before 1939, p. 675
David Feeny, Extensive versus Intensive Agricultural Development:
Induced Public Investment in Southeast Asia, 1900-1940, p. 687
NOTES AND DISCUSSION
Stefano Fenoaltea, The Organization of Serfdom in Eastern
Europe: A Comment, p. 705
Robert Millward, The Organization of Serfdom in Eastern Europe:
A Reply, p. 709
B. L. Anderson, David Richardson, Market Structure and Profits
of the British African Trade in the Late Eighteenth Century:
A Comment, p. 713
J. E. Inikori, Market Structure and Profits of the British
African Trade in the Late Eighteenth Century: A Rejoinder,
p. 723
REVIEW ARTICLE
Peter Temin, Monetary Trends and Other Phenomena, p. 729
Editors’ Notes, p. 740
Reviews of Books, p. 747
Book Notes, p. 792
Warren D. Devine Jr., From Shafts to Wires: Historical
Perspective on Electrification, p. 347
M. K. Thornton, R. L. Thornton, Manpower Needs for the Public
Works Programs of the Julio-Claudian Emperors, p. 373
Bruce M. S. Campbell, Arable Productivity in Medieval England:
Some Evidence from Norfolk, p. 379
Alexander James Field, Land Abundance, Interest/Profit Rates,
and Nineteenth-Century American and British Technology, p.
405
John A. James, Structural Change in American Manufacturing,
1850-1890, p. 433
Malcolm R. Burns, Economies of Scale of Tobacco Manufacture,
1897-1910, p. 461
NOTES AND DISCUSSION
Rona S. Weiss, The Market and Massachusetts Farmers, 1750-1850:
Comment, p. 475
Winifred B. Rothenberg, The Market and Massachusetts Farmers:
Reply, p. 479
Karl Hardach, Wheat, Rye, and the Sources of German Protection:
A Comment on Webb’s Article, p. 481
Steven B. Webb, Reply, p. 482
James M. MacDonald, Merger Statistics Revisited: A Comment,
p. 483
Richard Tilly, Reply, p. 486
Gene Smiley, Recent Unemployment Rate Estimates for the 1920s
and 1930s, p. 487
REVIEW ARTICLE
Tim Wright, Economic Development in China During the Nineteenth
and Twentieth Centuries, p. 494
Editors’ Notes, p. 501
Reviews of Books, p. 505
THE TASKS OF ECONOMIC HISTORY
PAPERS PRESENTED AT THE FORTY-SECOND ANNUAL MEETING OF THE
ECONOMIC HISTORY ASSOCIATION
Allan G. Bogue (Presidential Address), Changes in Mechanical
and Plant Technology. The Corn Belt, 1910-1940, p. 1
Angus Maddison, A Comparison of the Levels of GDP Per Capita
in Developed and Developing Countries, 1700-1980, p. 27
Cynthia Taft Morris, Irma Adelman, Institutional Influences
on Poverty in the Nineteenth Century: A Quantitative Comparative
Study, p. 43
Jeffrey O. Williamson, Discussion, p. 56
Morris, Adelman, Reply, p. 61
John Othick, Development Indicators and the Historical Study
of Human Welfare: towards a New Perspective, p. 63
Martha L. Olney, Fertility and the Standard of Living in Early
Modern England. In Consideration of Wrigley and Schofield,
p. 71
Harry C. McDean, “Reform” Social Darwinists and
Measuring Levels of Living on Americans Farms, 1920-1926, p. 79
Mancur Olson, Discussion, p. 86
Carole Shammas, Food Expenditures and Economic Well-Being
in Early Modern England, p. 89
Gloria L. Main, The Standard of Living in Colonial Massachusetts, p. 101
Lorena S. Walsh, Urban Amenities and Rural Sufficiency: Living
Standards and Consumer Behavior in the Colonial Chesapeake, 1643-1777,
p. 109
Paul O. E. Clemens, Discussion, p. 118
Anne C. Meyering, Did Capitalism Lead to the Decline of the
Peasantry? The Case of the French Combraille, p. 121
John Komlos, Poverty and Industrialization At the End of the “Phase-Transition” in the Czech Crown Lands, p.
129
Elvira M. Wilbur, Was Russian Peasant Agriculture Really That
Impoverished? New Evidence from a Case Study from the “Impoverished
Center” at the End of the Nineteenth Century, p. 137
Ira A. Glazier; Herman H. Freudenberger, Discussion, p.
145
J. R. Kearl, Clayne L. Pope, The Life Cycle in Economic History, p. 149
Jackson T. Main, Standards of Living and the Life Cycle in
Colonial Connecticut, p. 159
Robert A. Margo, Richard H. Steckel, Heights of Native-Bonn
Whites During the Antebellum Period, p. 167
R. A. Cage, The Standard of Living Debate: Glasgow, 1800-1850, p. 175
Susan B. Hanley, A High Standard of Living in Nineteenth-Century
Japan: Fact or Fantasy?, p. 183
Ian W. McLean, Jonathan Pincus, Did Australian Living Standards
Stagnate between 1890 and 1940?, p. 193
R. M. Hartwell; James I. Nakamura, Discussion, p. 203
Gene Smiley, Did Incomes for Most of the Population Fall from
1923 through 1929?, p. 209
Mark Schmitz, Price a. Fishback, The Distribution of Income
in the Great Depression: Preliminary State Estimates, p.
217
Roberta M. Spalter-Roth, Differentiating between the Living
Standards of Husbands and Wives in Two-Wage-Earner Families,
1968 and 1979, p. 231
Louis P. Cain, Discussion, p. 241
Margaret Sanders, Measurement of Levels of Living in the People’s
Republic of the Congo since 1950, p. 243
Nola Reinhardt, Commercialization of Agriculture and Rural
Living Standards: El Palmar, Colombia, 1960-1979, p. 251
M. Louise Fox, Income Distribution in Post-1964 Brazil: New
Results, p. 261
D. M. P. McCarthy, Discussion, p. 272
SUMMARIES OF DOCTORAL DISSERTATIONS
Carol E. Heim, Uneven Regional Development in Interwar Britain, p. 274
Sanford M. Jacoby, The Origins of Internal Labor Markets in
American Manufacturing Firms, 1910-1940, p. 276
Stephen W. Schoene, The Economics of U.S. Public Land Policy
Prior to 1860, p. 279
Diane Lindstrom, Discussion, p. 282
Roger C. Lister, Bank Behavior, Regulation, and Economic Development:
California, 1860-1910, p. 284
David Mitch, The Spread of Literacy in Nineteenth-Century
England, p. 287
Karen Pfeifer, Agrarian Reform and the Development of Capitalist
Agriculture in Algeria, p. 289
Robert E. Gallman, Discussion, p. 291
WORKSHOP SUMMARIES
John H. Munro (Convenor), Medieval Monetary Problems: Bimetallism
and Bullionism, p. 294
David F. Good (Convenor), Measuring the Integration of Markets
in Labor, Capital, and Products, p. 298
Gary D. Libecap (Convenor), Government Regulation in the Economy,
p. 301
Editors’ Notes, p. 303
Reviews of Books, p. 307
Claudia Goldin, Kenneth Sokoloff, Women, Children, and
Industrialization in the Early Republic: Evidence from the Manufacturing
Censuses, p. 741
Carla Rahn Phillips, The Spanish Wool Trade, 1500-1780,
p. 775
C. Knick Harley, Oligopoly Strategy and the Timing of American
Railroad Construction, p. 797
Joan Underhill Hannon, City Size and Ethnic Discrimination:
Michigan Agricultural Implements and Iron Working Industries,
1890, p. 825
Mark Aldrich, Determinants of Mortality Among New England
Cotton Mill Workers During the Progressive Era, p. 847
James Foreman-Peck, The American Challenge of the Twenties:
Multinationals and the European Motor Industry, p. 865
Helen Manning Hunter, The Role of Business Liquidity During
the Great Depression and Afterwards: Differences Between Large
and Small Firms, p. 883
NOTES AND DISCUSSION
Donald R. Adams Jr., The Standard of Living During American
Industrialization. Evidence from the Brandywine Region, 1800-1860, p. 903
Charles P. Kindleberger, Sweden in 1850 as an “Impoverished
Sophisticate”: Comment, p. 918
Lars O. Sandberg, Sweden as an “Impoverished Sophisticate”:
A Reply, p. 921
Editors’ Notes, p. 923
Reviews of Books, p. 929
David W. Galenson, The Atlantic Slave Trade and the Barbados
Market, 1673-1723, p. 491
Robert Millward, An Economic Analysis of the Organization
of Serfdom in Eastern Europe, p. 513
Robert E. Gallman, Influences on the Distribution of Landholdings
in Early Colonial North Carolina, p. 549
Morton Owen Schapiro, A Land Availability Model of Fertility
Changes in the Rural Northern United States, 1760-1870, p.
577
Stefano Fenoaltea, The Growth of the Utilities Industries
in Italy, 1861-1913, p. 601
Richard Tilly, Mergers, External Growth, and Finance in the
Development of Large-Scale Enterprise in Germany, 1880-1913, p. 629
Trevor J. O. Dick, Canadian Newsprint, 1913-1930. National
Policies and the North American Economy, p. 659
NOTES AND DISCUSSION
Bradley O. Lewis, Economic Causes of Late Nineteenth-Century
Agrarian Unrest: Comment, p. 688
Robert A. McGuire, Economic Causes of Late Nineteenth-Century
Agrarian Unrest: Reply, p. 697
Editors’ Notes, p. 700
Reviews of Books, p. 705
C. Knick Harley, British Industrialization Before 1841:
Evidence of Slower Growth During the Industrial Revolution,
p. 267
Jeffrey A. Frankel, The 1807-1809 Embargo Against Great Britain,
p. 291
Steven B. Webb, Agricultural Protection in Wilhelminian Germany:
Forging an Empire with Pork and Rye, p. 309
Lee J. Alston, Robert Higgs, Contractual Mix in Southern Agriculture
since the Civil War: Facts, Hypotheses, and Tests, p. 327
Michael R. Haines, Agriculture and Development in Prussian
Upper Silesia, 1846-1913, p. 355
Moses S. Musoke, Alan L. Olmstead, The Rise of the Cotton
Industry in California: A Comparative Perspective, p. 385
NOTES AND DISCUSSION
Scott D. Grosse, On the Alleged Antebellum Surge in Wage Differentials:
A Critique of Williamson and Lindert, p. 413
Peter H. Lindert, Jeffrey G. Williamson, Antebellum Wage Widening
Once Again, p. 419
Albert W. Niemi Jr., The Increasing Pay Gap for Women in Textile
and Clothing Industries: A Reexamination, p. 423
Robert J. Thornton, Thomas Hyclak, The Increasing Pay Gap
for Women in the Textile and Clothing Industries, 1910 to 1970:
An Alternative Explanation, p. 427
Paul F. McGouldrick, Michael B. Tannen, The Rising Male-Female
Pay Gap: Contrary Evidence and New Findings, p. 432
Editors’ Notes, p. 440
Reviews of Books, p. 445
Book Notes, p. 488
THE TASKS OF ECONOMIC HISTORY
PAPERS PRESENTED AT THE FORTY-FIRST ANNUAL MEETING OF THE
ECONOMIC HISTORY ASSOCIATION
Jonathan Hughes, The Great Strike at Nushagak Station,
1951: Institutional Gridlock, p. 1
Richard Sylla, Monetary Innovation in America, p. 21
Michael David Bordo, Discussion, p. 31
Eugene Nelson White, The Political Economy of Banking Regulation,
1864-1933, p. 33
Richard H. Keehn, Discussion, p. 41
Robert B. Zevin, The Economics of Normalcy, p. 43
Stephen Resnick, Richard Wolff, A Reformulation of Marxian
Theory and Historical Analysis, p. 53
Susan Feiner, Factors, Bankers, and Masters: Class Relations
in the Antebellum South, p. 61
Rolf Jensen, The Transition from Primitive Communism: The
Wolof Social Formation of West Africa, p. 69
Rona S. Weiss, Primitive Accumulation in the United States:
The Interaction between Capitalist and Noncapitalist Class Relations
in Seventeenth-Century Massachusetts, p. 77
William Lazonick, Discussion, p. 83
Barry J. Eichengreen, The Proximate Determinants of Domestic
Investment in Victorian Britain, p. 87
William H. Phillips, Induced Innovation and Economic Performance
in Late Victorian British Industry, p. 97
William P. Kennedy, Economic Growth and Structural Change
in the United Kingdom, 1870-1914, p. 105
Ben Baack; Donald N. McCloskey, Discussion, p. 115
Lance E. Davis, Robert Huttenback, The Political Economy of
British Imperialism: Measures of Benefits and Support, p. 119
Michael Edelstein, Discussion, p. 131
B. R. Tomlinson, The Political Economy of the Raj: The Decline
of Colonialism, p. 133
Dennis O. Flynn, Fiscal Crisis and the Decline of Spain (Castile),
p. 139
Michael R. Weisser, The Agrarian Depression in Seventeenth-Century
Spain, p. 149
Philip T. Hoffman, Sharecropping and Investment in Agriculture
in Early Modern France, p. 155
Carla Rahn Phillips; Domenico Sella, Discussion, p. 160
Susan B. Carter, Mark Prus, The Labor Market and the American
High School Girl, 1890-1928, p. 163
Susan A. Matthies, Families At Work: An Analysis By Sex of
Child Workers in the Cotton Textile Industry, p. 173
Peter Philips, Gender-Based Wage Differentials in Pennsylvania
and New Jersey Manufacturing, 1900-1950, p. 181
Robert A. Margo, Discussion, p. 187
Marvin McInnis, The Changing Structure of Canadian Agriculture,
1867-1897, p. 191
Trevor J. O. Dick, Mechanization and North American Prairie
Farm Costs 1896-1930, p. 199
Robert E. Ankli, Wendy Millar, Ontario Agriculture in Transition:
The Switch from Wheat to Cheese, p. 207
Wayne D. Rasmussen, Discussion, p. 216
SUMMARIES OF DOCTORAL DISSERTATIONS
James W. Eaton, The Wyoming Stock Growers Association: An
Application of Davis’s and North ‘s Theory of Institutional Change,
p. 218
Cathy Louise McHugh, The Family Labor System in the Southern
Cotton Textile Industry, 1880-1915, p. 220
Roberto B. Martins, Growing in Silence: The Slave Economy
of Nineteenth-Century Minas Gerais, Brazil, p. 222
Robert O. Moeller, Peasants, Politics, and Pressure Groups
in War and Inflation: A Study of the Rhineland and Westphalia,
1919-1924, p. 223
Lon L. Peters, Cooperative Competition in German Coal and
Steel, 1893-1914, p. 227
Arthur O. Woolf, Energy and Technology in American Manufacturing:
1900-1929, p. 230
WORKSHOP SUMMARY
David Feeny (Convenor), Quantitative Third-World Economic
History, p. 233
Editors’ Notes, p. 235
Reviews of Books, p. 239
Harlan I. Halsey, The Choice Between High-Pressure and
Low-Pressure Steam Power in America in the Early Nineteenth Century,
p. 723
J. E. Inikori, Market Structure and the Profits of the British
African Trade in the Late Eighteenth Century, p. 745
Ann Carlos, The Causes and Origins of the North American Fur
Trade Rivalry: 1804-1810, p. 777
Susan Mosher Stuard, Dowry Inflation and Increments in Wealth
in Medieval Ragusa (Dubrovnik), p. 795
Ya’akov Firestone, Land Equalization and Factor Scarcities:
Holding Size and the Burden of Impositions in Imperial Central
Russia and the Late Ottoman Levant, p. 813
Robert A. McGuire, Economic Causes of Late Nineteenth-Century
Agrarian Unrest, p. 835
Richard H. Timberlake Jr., The Significance of Unaccounted
Monies, p. 853
Stanley Lebergott, Through the Blockade: The Profitability
and Extent of Cotton Smuggling, 1861-1865, p. 867
NOTES AND DISCUSSION
Gene Smiley, Regional Variation in Bank Loan Rates in the
Interwar Years, p. 889
Sidney Pollard, Sheffield and Sweet Auburn-Amenities and Living
Standards in the British Industrial Revolution: A Comment,
p. 902
Jeffrey G. Williamson, Some Myths Die Hard-Urban Disamenities
One More Time: A Reply, p. 905
Editors’ Notes, p. 908
Reviews of Books, p. 910
Book Notes, p. 964
William H. Lazonick, Production Relations, Labor Productivity,
and Choice of Technique: British and U. S. Cotton Spinning,
p. 491
Frank D. Lewis, Farm Settlement on the Canadian Prairies,
1898 to 1911, p. 517
Eugene Nelson White, State-Sponsored Insurance of Bank Deposits
in the United States, 1907-1929, p. 537
Philip Mirowski, The Rise (and Retreat) of a Market: English
Joint Stock Shares in the Eighteenth Century, p. 559
David J. St. Clair, The Motorization and Decline of Urban
Public Transit, 1935-1950, p. 579
Stuart Daultrey, David Dickson, Cormac Ó Gráda,
Eighteenth- Century Irish Population: New Perspectives from
Old Sources, p. 601
Lawrence H. Officer, The Floating Dollar in the Greenback
Period: A Test of Theories of Exchange-Rate Determination, p. 629
DISCUSSION
James C. Riley, Mortality on Long-Distance Voyages in the
Eighteenth Century, p. 651
REVIEW ARTICLE
Ralph Austen, Capitalism, Class, and African Colonial Agriculture.
The Mating of Marxism and Empiricism, p. 657
Editors’ Notes, p. 664
Book Notes, p. 668
Reviews of Books, p. 670
J. I. Nakamura, Human Capital Accumulation in Premodern
Rural Japan, p. 263
Winifred B. Rothenberg, The Market and Massachusetts Farmers,
1750-1855, p. 283
Jacques A. Barbier, Herbert S. Klein, Revolutionary Wars and
Public Finances: The Madrid Treasury, 1784-1807, p. 315
Louis P. Cain, Donald G. Paterson, Factor Biases and Technical
Change in Manufacturing: The American System, 1850-1919,
p. 341
Walther Kirchner, Russian Tariffs and Foreign Industries before
1919: The German Entrepreneur’s Perspective, p. 361
Hugh Rockoff, Price and Wage Controls in Four Wartime Periods,
p. 381
DISCUSSION
Mark Schmitz, Donald Schaefer, Paradox Lost: Westward Expansion
and Slave Prices before the Civil War, p. 402
REVIEW ARTICLES
Richard Roehl, Medieval Texts: A Review Article, p. 408
Klaus Wolff, “Textile History”: The First Ten Years, p. 411
Maris A. Vinovskis, Estimating the Wealth of Americans on
the Eve of the Revolution, p. 415
William Grampp, Ricardo and Malthus, p. 421
Editors’ Notes, p. 424
Announcements, p. 426
Book Notes, p. 428
Reviews of Books, p. 430
THE TASKS OF ECONOMIC HISTORY
PAPERS PRESENTED AT THE FORTIETH ANNUAL MEETING OF THE ECONOMIC
HISTORY ASSOCIATION
Richard A. Easterlin, Why Isn’t the Whole World Developed?, p. 1
Elias H. Tuma, Why Problems Do Not Go Away: The Case of Inflation,
p. 21
Marie Elizabeth Sushka, Discussion, p. 29
William Lazonick, Competition, Specialization, and Industrial
Decline, p. 31
David W. Galenson, White Servitude and the Growth of Black
Slavery in Colonial America, p. 39
Lorena S. Walsh, Discussion, p. 48
Elyce J. Rotella, The Transformation of the American Office:
Changes in Employment and Technology, p. 51
William H. Mulligan Jr., Mechanization and Work in the American
Shoe Industry: Lynn, Massachusetts, 1852-1883, p. 59
Mary H. Blewett, Discussion, p. 64
Leonard A. Carlson, Labor Supply, the Acquisition of Skills,
and the Location of Southern Textile Mills, 1880-1900, p. 65
Mary J. Oates, Discussion, p. 72
Jeffrey G. Williamson, Urban Disamenities, Dark Satanic Mills,
and the British Standard of Living Debate, p. 75
Jeremy Atack, Fred Bateman, Egalitarianism, Inequality, and
Age: The Rural North in 1860, p. 85
Clayne L. Pope, Discussion, p. 94
John Joseph Wallis, Daniel K. Benjamin, Public Relief and
Private Employment in the Great Depression, p. 97
Harry N. Scheiber, Regulation, Property Rights, and Definition
of “The Market”: Law and the American Economy,
p. 103
Robert Higgs, Discussion, p. 110
Terry L. Anderson, p. J. Hill, Economic Growth in a Transfer
Society: The United States Experience, p. 113
Thomas S. Ulen, Discussion, p. 120
Hugh Rockoff, The Response of the Giant Corporations to Wage
and Price Controls in World War II, p. 123
Louis Cain, George Neumann, Planning for Peace: The Surplus
Property Act of 1944, p. 129
Thomas K. McCraw, Discussion, p. 136
Frank B. Tipton Jr., Government Policy and Economic Development
in Germany and Japan: A Skeptical Reevaluation, p. 139
Gary D. Libecap, Bureaucratic Opposition to the Assignment
of Property Rights: Overgrazing on the Western Range, p.
151
Jonathan J. Pincus, Discussion, p. 159
Ann Harper-Fender, Discouraging the Use of a Common Resource:
The Crees of Saskatchewan, p. 163
Marilyn Gerriets, The Organization of Exchange in Early Christian
Ireland, p. 171
Joel Mokyr, Discussion, p. 177
Peter toumanoff, The Development of the Peasant Commune in
Russia, p. 179
Anita B. Baker-Lampe, Discussion, p. 185
DOCTORAL CANDIDATES
Summaries of Doctoral Dissertations by: Peter FitzRandolph,
Rodney Dale Green, Philip Lesser, Dena S. Markoff, Arthur F.
McEvoy, and Richard J. Salvucci, p. 187
Carolyn L. Weaver, Discussion, p. 199
Announcements, p. 20
Association Notes, p. 202
Editors’ Notes, p. 203
Reviews of Books, p. 205