Debating the promises and limits of the "new economic history," seventeen economists and economic historians look at Great Britain, from the peak of her industrial dominance in 1840 to her eclipse by the surging economies of Germany and the United States. Their discussion brings a new methodological challenge to the field of economic history and a new interpretation of the British economy in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.
Originally published in 1972.
The Princeton Legacy Library uses the latest print-on-demand technology to again make available previously...
Debating the promises and limits of the "new economic history," seventeen economists and economic historians look at Great Britain, from the peak o...
Debating the promises and limits of the "new economic history," seventeen economists and economic historians look at Great Britain, from the peak of her industrial dominance in 1840 to her eclipse by the surging economies of Germany and the United States. Their discussion brings a new methodological challenge to the field of economic history and a new interpretation of the British economy in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.
Originally published in 1972.
The Princeton Legacy Library uses the latest print-on-demand technology to again make available previously...
Debating the promises and limits of the "new economic history," seventeen economists and economic historians look at Great Britain, from the peak o...