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Programme
B9 -
Proto-Globalization: Commercial Networks & Consortiums in the Early Modern Age Session abstract: Show Session abstract: Hide
The session will propose some new insights into the much debated area of "proto-globalization". Specifically, global merchant networks and consortiums of traders in the Early Modern Age will be presented and we hope to incite some new discussion on when to put the beginning of the so-called globalization. Organizers: • - Formal and Informal Business Networks in European-Asian Trade at the End of the 16th Century Paper summary: Show Paper summary: Hide Far trade companies and business communities played an important role in the phase of the European expansion. Using a semantic method the author has accumulated data on the world-wide network of commercial players that formed the proto-Globalization in its earliest phase. • Om Prakash - The Dutch Commercial Network in Early Modern Asia Paper summary: Show Paper summary: Hide By far the most outstanding feature that distinguished the Dutch East India Company from its principal fellow European commercial enterprises operating in Asia in the early modern period was its large-scale participation in the port to port trade within the Indian Ocean and the South China Sea.While certainly related to its Euro-Asian trade, the Company's Indian Ocean trade had a distinct identity and importance of its own and contributed handsomely to the VOC's overall prosperity through the seventeenth century. This paper analyses some of the key elements that contributed to the Ccmpany's overwhelming success in this domain as also the circumstances which limited this success essentially to the seventeenth and the early years of the eighteenth century. • Claudia Schnurmann Participants: • Jeroen van der Vliet - Piecing Together the Late 18th Century Maritime Networks of Merchants from Amsterdam Paper summary: Show Paper summary: Hide Estimates of the trade volume of the port of Amsterdam during the 18th century have largely been based on levies on incoming ships and the goods they imported. Less clear is the share of local merchants in the outward maritime trade of Amsterdam and in which overseas markets they were active. For a better understanding the archive of the water bailiff might prove helpful. From 1747 onwards, this archive holds tens of thousands of so-called "monsterrollen" from ships that mustered new crews in Amsterdam. These documents not only provide the names of ships, captains, sailors and ports of call, but also shed new light on the evolving scope and structure of early modern maritime business networks. • Tijl Vanneste - A Cross-Cultural Network of Diamond Traders: James Dormer (1708-1758) and his Correspondents
The paper focusses on the concrete case of a diamond network that existed in the 1740s and 1750s. It extended itself geographically between Antwerp, Lisbon, Amsterdam and London with ties to India and Brazil. The merchants that were involved in this informal but stable circuit of trade were of different nationality and religious background, amongst them Sephardic Jews, an English Catholic, French Huguenots, English and Dutch Protestants. In analyzing the correspondence these merchants maintained, one can distinguish different elements that made the network operate. • Raf Verbruggen - Globalisation, long-distance trade and the interlocking city network in late medieval and 16th-century Europe Paper summary: Show Paper summary: Hide Geographers and social scientists investigating present-day economic globalisation have shown that cities are nodes in global networks which transcend the national level. Such networks nowadays are especially generated by advanced producer service firms (banks, insurance companies, accountancy firms etc.) producing intra-firm flows of information, knowledge and capital between their different offices. Consequently, the study of the spatial organisation of these multi-locational firms allows to measure the connectivity of cities in this interlocking network. But are such transnational city networks limited to our contemporary society? My research investigates the existence of a transnational city network generated by the activities of business organisations in late medieval and early modern Europe (ca. 1300 – ca. 1600). More concretely, data on the spatial organisation of ca. 100 trade and banking firms have been collected. Through the aggregation of these data, the structure and dynamics of the city network can be investigated. In the past, the study of such large-scale, transnational city networks has mostly been neglected. This research attempts to fill this gap through the application of the concepts developed by geographers and social scientists investigating current world city networks in a historical context. This allows us to question whether globalisation and the so-called network society are as new as often conceived in the literature. C9 -
Occupational health: issues and actors (XVIIIe – XXe centuries) Session abstract: Show Session abstract: Hide This session deals with the history of occupational health since the XVIII th century, and particularly with categories used to define, regulate or change workers' health conditions (disability, prevention, repair...). The emergence and use of these categories need to be related to the economical and social context, to the different types of labour organization and to the various patterns of social welfare. We will focus on the way categories are determined and used; these questions will be explored through the analysis of actors and social institutions that administer the law (administrations, factory inspectors, insurance companies, occupational medical officers, courts ...). We will explore mobilizations and strategies developed by firms and trade unions, experts or scientists and also victims’ organizations. Relations between these different actors can take the shape either of rules, or tacit understandings, or conflicts. Understanding these positions leads to study the debates led at international, European and national level but also within firms and various social groups. This session proposes to tackle these questions in a long-run prospect, in order to understand how representations and strategies might emerge, change or be carried on. The focus on the individual level will also be taken into account because it includes the questions of physical integrity, career paths and working activities. In connection with this individual level, the study of occupational health needs to take gender and nationality into consideration. All these questions will be considered in a comparative perspective in order to identify differences and analogies among national experiences. Organizers: • - Transnational Expertise, National Powers and Social Actors: Two Times in the Musculo-Skeletal Disorders History Paper summary: Show Paper summary: Hide Peri-articular pathologies offer a particular scope for examining different forms of transnational policy in health at work. They have their source in the movements made and the postures adopted by labourers. Referring to the difficulty of individuating what part of these pathologies can be imputed to work, states have for a long time avoided letting them feature on lists of illnesses for which compensation can be paid. The first part of this paper examines the first steps towards a European Economic Community policy in the 1960s. At this time, the EEC placed health at work on its agenda and invited member states to elaborate new common regulations, including musculo-skeletal disorders among the problems to be dealt with. But at this time, the plan only came to a official recommendation. The second part relates to the 1980s and 90s, when the majority of industrial countries saw a spectacular rise in the incidence of peri-articular work-related illness. This phenomenon shook up the experts, the social groups and the political powers. Trade unionists and researchers attempted to understand the phenomenon and brought about recognition on an international scale. Both of these movements raise questions about the role of experts and the relationship between national politics and trans-national dynamics. In general terms, the trans-national scale seems to be scope for progress in the assumption of responsibility for work-related health problems, while the national level seems more to favor its rejection. Above all, national states preserve their powers of decision-making when international dynamics strengthen their authority. • Anne-Sophie Bruno • Eric Geerkens • Catherine Omnes Participants: • Allard Dembe - Historical Perspectives on Working Time Regulation
Since the early days of the Industrial Revolution, numerous efforts have been made by government entities to enact regulations limiting employees’ allowable working hours. In Great Britain and the United States, policy makers often were motivated to adopt protective legislation out of concerns about the deleterious effects of long hours on workers’ health. Debates about permissible working hours in the U.S. and Britain typically have been couched in the context of deeper struggles about employer control over employees’ wages, job security, and working conditions. The original Factory Acts in Great Britain and the Ten-Hour Day Movement in New England during the Industrial Revolution pitted capitalists’ interests against workers’ demands, reflecting deep-seated antagonisms and class differences between management and labor. Bitter struggles over control of working hours continued into the Progressive Era in the United States. Proposals for protective legislation in Britain and the United States often have been played out against the backdrop of demonstrations, strikes, and labor unrest. In general, proposals to regulate allowable working hours in Britain and the U.S. have been initiated in response to underlying conflicts between labor and management. • Françoise Fortunet • Ronald Johnston - Company cultures and occupational health and safety in Scotland, c. 1930s-1980s
Something of an ‘orthodox view’ has emerged within the historiography of west of Scotland industry regarding industrial relations and health and safety at work. In what is now becoming an accepted view, heavy industrial employers in the Clydeside region – the most industrialized area of Scotland in this period – are perceived to have been authoritarian and anti-trade union in outlook, while presiding over workplaces which were dangerous and unhealthy. In this paper we argue that this interpretation needs re-evaluation, and that a more nuanced approach is required. The paper reports on the latest phase of our research into the history of workplace health and safety in the UK, and examines managerial approaches across a range of industries in a changing industrial economy – focusing on the post-1945 period to the 1980s. We illustrate the complexities underpinning the provision of health and safety at work, and the difficulty of generalising on managerial approaches. We illustrate that a range of employer strategies can be identified, ranging from negligent to welfarist. The paper is based on a broad range of archival evidence and on interviews we recently conducted with occupational health professionals working in Scotland. • Thomas Le Roux - Risques et maladies du travail : le Conseil de salubrité de Paris aux sources de l’ambiguïté hygiéniste au XIXème siècle
Le XIXème siècle est le siècle est celui de l’avènement de l’hygiène publique. Paradoxalement, c’est également le siècle durant lequel les questions sanitaires ont été négligées à l’intérieur des ateliers et des usines. Pour bon nombre d’historiens (un point sur l’historiographie de cette question sera abordé), la figure de Villermé incarne l’ambiguïté de ces hygiénistes du XIXème siècle, à la fois préoccupés par la santé des travailleurs, mais qui refusaient d’accorder une grande importance aux causes professionnelles, leur préférant des causes sociales. Bien qu’ils étaient de caractères et de philosophies différentes, il a souvent été associé à Villermé le médecin Parent-Duchâtelet, célèbre pour ses études sur la prostitution parisienne. Leurs publications des décennies 1830 et 1840 eurent en effet un grand retentissement, au point que le mouvement hygiéniste parisien fut pris en modèle en Europe. • Aimée Moutet - Patrtonat, syndicats ouvriers et ergonomie en matière de sécurité du travail dans la métallurgie française. 1960-1973 Dans les années 1960-1973 le développement de l'ergonomie de langue française a influé sur les positions du patronat et des syndicats ouvriers de la métallurgie (CGT et CFDT) . Mais cette influence a surtout marqué les doctrines. Le patronat, au lieu d'attribuer les accidents du travail au seul facteur humain, a cherché les causes multiples que généraient les conditions de travail et les moyens ergonomiques de les éradiquer. Les syndicats ouvriers, sous l'influence de la CFDT qui a collaboré avec les ergonomes du Conservatoire National des Arts et Métiers (CNAM), obligés également de répondre au programme patronal en ce domaine, ont inclus l'ergonomie dans l'amélioration des conditions de travail qu'ils revendiquaient. Mais lorsque s'est déclenchée la crise économique de 1973, les réalisations patronales dans les entreprises (par exemple USINOR et Marius Berliet) restaient très partielles, tandis que la crise ötait aux confédérations ouvrières leur pouvroir de négociation. • Judith Rainhorn - Acteurs similaires, processus divergents, chronologies décalées : un regard transatlantique sur l’usage de la céruse et le saturnisme des peintres (France – Etats-Unis, 1900-1940). Paper summary: Show Paper summary: Hide La fabrication et l’usage de la peinture au plomb se sont considérablement développés au cours du XIXe siècle, jusqu’à devenir un facteur important de morbidité au travail : le saturnisme professionnel des ouvriers de la céruse et des peintres en bâtiment est considéré vers 1900 comme l’une des principales maladies du travail, en Europe comme aux Etats-Unis. Cependant, au cours de la première moitié du XXe siècle, l’attention portée à cette affection, les débats suscités autour de la question de l’empoisonnement industriel et les modalités de l’irruption de la question sanitaire dans le champ du travail contrastent fortement de part et d’autre de l’Atlantique. Si la France apparaît comme pionnière dans son combat contre le saturnisme des cérusiers et des peintres, tant dans le monde ouvrier ou médical que dans la sphère politique, les Etats-Unis s’illustrent au contraire par une attention tardive et limitée à l’épidémie saturnine. La comparaison menée ici permet de réinterroger l’articulation prohibition/dissuasion entre deux modèles industriels et économiques divergents qui aboutissent tous deux, selon des chronologies décalées, à l’extinction progressive de l’agent pathogène. D9 -
The Comparative History of Paying for Public Goods Session abstract: Show Session abstract: Hide
The failure to supply public goods has been one of the main barriers to economic development throughout global history. Only a tiny share of the humans that have ever lived has had access to goods and services that deliver strong positive externalities. Most humans have had to live without roads, rails, harbors, clean water, clinics, hospitals, and schools. Why did most of history fail to promote these public goods and services even though they clearly promote economic growth as well as life expectancy? How did some social settings conquer these problems and how did public provision interact with private provision in these settings? Organizers: • - Background paper Revealing Failures in the History of School Finance
Revealing Failures in the History of School Finance • Dan Bogart - Imperialists and Private Companies: New Evidence on the Efficiency of Indian Railways, 1882-1912 Paper summary: Show Paper summary: Hide Using a new dataset on Indian railway companies, we study the effects of ownership structure on performance between 1882 and 1912. Over this period, new public-private partnerships came to dominate the scene as former private companies were bought out by the State but were allowed to retain operations in most cases. Moreover, any new companies created in these decades managed the operation of State owned lines. By exploiting the switch from private ownership and operation to state ownership and private operation within the same railway lines, we find state ownership and private operation lead to significant efficiency gains. This shift contributed to India’s success in developing one of the most efficient railway networks in the world by the early 20th century. • Latika Chaudhary - Social Divisions and Public Goods Provision: Evidence from Colonial India Paper summary: Show Paper summary: Hide
How did the British colonial government provide public goods in India? Using a new micro dataset of public spending on infrastructure, schooling and medical services, this paper explores the relationship between spending and local district characteristics across early 20th century Indian districts. The historical literature has generally emphasized the centralized nature of revenues but the local analysis reveals significant heterogeneity both across and within provinces in spending. Districts with a larger proportion of upper castes are correlated with higher public goods provision perhaps due to their greater political representation on local councils or higher economic status. The patterns broadly mirror the social hierarchy of the Indian caste system but it is unclear whether the British exacerbated existing socio-economic differences between groups or whether Indian elites successfully lobbied to influence the provision of public services. • Steven Nafziger - Primary Schooling and Literacy in Late-Tsarist Russia
NOTE: The paper to be presented at the WEHC will depart significantly from the version posted here. I hope to update this version by the end of July. Participants: • Mark Dincecco - Political Transformations and Public Finances: Europe, 1650-1913 Paper summary: Show Paper summary: Hide The proposed book performs a systematic investigation of the evolution of political structures and public finances in Europe over the long term. By 1913, many states had struck an institutional balance that not only enabled central governments to gather large tax revenues, but limited executive discretion over expenditures. The book’s central task is to fuse arguments that highlight fiscal centralization with those that emphasize parliamentary reforms into an integrated analysis of institutional change. To do so, the book develops an innovative statistical framework that tests the effects of structural changes within and across polities. The results, which suggest that political transformations had remarkable effects on public finances, shed new light on the role of institutions in the process of long-run growth. Moreover, since its forms of fiscal governance have been widely implemented, an understanding of the European historical experience translates into useful lessons for today’s emerging economies. • Christina Gathmann - How Do Electoral Systems Affect Fiscal Policy? Evidence from State and Local Governments, 1890-2005
Using a new data set from 1890 to today, we estimate how the adoption of proportional representation affects policies in Swiss cantons. We show that proportional systems tilt spending toward public goods like education and welfare benefits but decrease spending for targeted transfers like roads and agricultural subsidies. • Mary MacKinnon • Anne McCants - Gothic Economies: small gifts, high finance and investing in eternity. Paper summary: Show Paper summary: Hide Of the many campaigns brought to fruition by the economic prosperity of the High Middle Ages, few have left evidence as permanent as those to build (or rebuild) cathedrals, abbeys and other major church buildings in the Gothic style. Between the 12th and early 16th centuries a massive public and private investment was made in these soaring monuments to both human ingenuity and the glory of God. This project draws upon the extant financial accounts of numerous Gothic building campaigns to explore three interrelated questions: how did a building campaign get activated; in what combination of ways were they paid for; and who served as the beneficiaries of the investment represented by a completed Gothic structure? I argue that the cooperation between private donations and public expenditures to these campaigns represents not only a stunning testimony to the success of the combined agricultural and urban medieval economy, but also a significant investment in public infrastructure with a centuries-long stream of benefits. • Chris Minns - School Provision and Pupil Attendance: Evidence From the Early 20th Century Elementary schooling in North America in the early 20th century underwent major changes with the spread of graded schools with multiple classrooms and teachers to semi-urban and rural areas. Detailed schooling records from British Columbia indicate that pupil attendance responded strongly to the introduction of additional teachers in one-room schools. The attendance impact of grading a school dominated alternatives such as employing more highly qualified teachers, or building additional schools to reduce catchment areas. Changes in the provision of schooling can account for about a quarter of the 30 percentage point increase in attendance rates between 1900 and 1930. • David Mitch - Did High Stakes Testing Policies result in educational divergence in Victorian England In 1863, the English Parliament set in place a system of elementary school finance in which national level funding for individual schools depended in part on the outcomes of student examinations conducted by school inspectors. It came to be known as payment by results. This system remained in place for roughly thirty years through the early 1890s. At the height of the system in the 1870s and 1880s, on average, roughly half of the national level funding a school received depended on the outcome of student examinations. Did the system result in a leveling up in the funding available to all schools who persisted or did it result in a widening in funding gaps between successful and poorly performing schools? In contrast with previous studies by historians of education which have considered national level impacts of the policy, this paper employs county level data to look at trends between 1870 and 1890. It will consider the extent to which disparities in both funding and educational level outcomes widened or narrowed across the 42 counties of England and Wales in conjunction with the system of payment by results. It thus aims at an evaluation of a Victorian educational policy that has resonance with current school policy debates and discussions in the U.S. and elsewhere. E9 -
International Comparison of Output and Productivity in History Session abstract: Show Session abstract: Hide
International comparison of output and productivity is important in economic history research because it addresses compatible income, welfare and cost of production between countries and more importantly, it also facilitates empirical tests of theories that attempt to explain earlier economic development. Such comparison relies on the measure of purchasing power parity (PPP) or similar quantitative approaches, and is thus highly data-intensive. This proposed session will encourage researchers to present their studies using PPP or other quantitative approaches to international comparison in economic history. As well as discussing methodological issues and data problems, the session will encourage discussion of the implications for the process of economic development. Organizers: • • Stephen Broadberry - Industrial Productivity Performance and Institutional Regimes: A Czechoslovak/UK Comparison, 1921-1991 This paper provides the first detailed quantitative study of labour productivity in an east European country in an international comparative framework covering both the interwar period of private enterprise and the postwar period of communist rule. Czechoslovak industrial labour productivity fluctuated around two-thirds of the UK level during the interwar period and from the 1950s to the end of the 1970s. During the high period of mass production in the early postwar period, Czechoslovakia’s productivity position even improved to around three-quarters of the UK level. During the 1980s, however, Czechoslovakia’s productivity position deteriorated sharply falling to around one third of the UK level by 1991. The relationship between institutional regime and productivity performance was historically contingent. Central planning allowed Czechoslovak industry to improve its comparative productivity position temporarily during the era of mass production, but could not adapt to the requirements of flexible production technology during the 1980s. The ensuing crisis contributed to the end of communist rule and the break-up of the Czechoslovak state. • Harry X. Wu - What Explains the Income Gaps between China, Japan and the United States for circa 1935? – A Production-side PPP Approach
Income gaps between countries can be explained by three effects, namely, a labour participation effect that is determined by age and gender structures of population and working hours per person employed, an industry-specific productivity effect, and an industrial structure effect. Due to its “industry-of-origin” nature, the production-side purchasing power parity (PPP) approach is an ideal approach to address the research problem because it enables not only the conversion of national income and labour productivity into a common numéraire but also the decomposition of income gaps between nations. Participants: • Herman de Jong - How the United States Forged Ahead. New Estimates of America's Manufacturing Productivity Surge Vis-à-Vis the United Kingdom, 1900-1950 The manufacturing productivity gap between the U.S. and the U.K. became much larger during the interwar period than existing estimates suggest. This paper presents two benchmark estimates for respectively 1910 and 1935 of levels of real value added per working hour based on the official industrial census reports. A structural shift methodology is applied to analyze comparative productivity movements for industrial branches in the period 1900-1957. U.S. manufacturing shows high comparative levels and growth rates for chemicals and engineering. These results support revisionist accounts of Robert Gordon and Alexander Field on the Depression’s strengthening of American productivity leadership. • Jean-Pierre Dormois - How bad was the French economy on the eve of World War Two; or, has Angus Maddison been too optimistic about French interwar GNP? A previous reconstruction of French industrial accounts for 1931 pointed to a possible overvaluation of industrial output at the beginning of the 1930s and hence cast doubts on the series used by Maddison for his international comparisons. Maddison has French economy-wide productivity not only reversing its decline vis-à-vis the US in the 1920s, but also more surprisingly catching up further in the decade of the Depression in the 1930s. Since this assessment relies on a single, somewhat ancient benchmark for 1938, the construction of which is examined in detail in the paper, a revision seems in order. Besides, whereas the existing series were constructed from the output side, a different approach, from the income side, is attempted here. First, we estimate domestic industrial product at the national level using the wage bill and labour output ratios for the 15 branches of industry and second, we proceed to the same exercise at the departmental level using a new database on employment, working hours and earnings to obtain a new estimate of industrial (and services’) output for 1936 and 1938. While the latter offers a benchmark against which to match existing estimates, the former can be more conveniently used in an Anglo-French-German comparison. Preliminary results appear extremely sensitive to the wage ratios used to compute the wage bill. Following the Popular Front electoral victory in June, wages were upgraded across the industrial sector after new collective contracts were enforced in the second semester of that year. We test many options in turn. It appears in any case that the suspicion of industrial output being inflated for 1936 by a wide margin was ill-founded. The attention then turns to the service sector which, in the original accounts was reconstructed on a very slim base indeed. For this purpose we use a heretofore untapped source: the records of the patente (a business tax) – as well as employment data again for the 90 departments. Here again the assumption of full employment in the tertiary sector for the year concerned seems unrealistic and ignores the historical background. Therefore wide-spread unemployment and underemployment point to a decisive reduction of French productive capacity as a result of the Depression and economic policies introduced in 1936. • Debin Ma • Svante Prado - Sweden Chasing the American and the British Productivity Frontiers in Manufacturing, 1869–1950 This paper establishes comparative levels of Swedish labour productivity in the manufacturing industry vis-à-vis the UK and the US for three benchmark years, 1909, 1924 and 1935. The method used is the industry of origin approach, mostly Rosatas’ physical output per worker, but also net output per worker. Time series of labour productivity are used to cover the entire 1869-1950 period. The results show that Swedish convergence in labour productivity was manifest around the turn of the century and in the 1930s and 1940s. The Swedish catch up thus contrasts with Stephen Broadberry’s long-term US/UK and Germany/UK evidence, which indicated that the comparative productivity ratios, despite great swings during especially wars, always gravitated towards a long-run path of stability. The Swedish case tends to bolster the argument, prevalent in an older convergence literature, that a significant component in the process of income convergence is technology spillover. It also lends support to theories attributing a crucial role to the manufacturing industry. The paper seeks to briefly outline the possible causes of Swedish acceleration in productivity, with particular emphasis on the first episode of catch up around the turn of the century. • Leandro Prados de la Escosura • Claudia Rei - Labor Compensation in the Portuguese and Dutch Merchant Empires The different organizational structure of the Portuguese and Dutch merchant empires affected their ability to monitor workers. I test the theoretical implications of these differences using micro data of overseas workers' compensation from the sixteenth to the eighteenth century. The two merchant empires used significantly different compensation structures: working for the king of Portugal corresponded on average to a bonus-wage ratio two-thirds higher than that of the Dutch East India Company. These results are consistent with theoretical implications and provide additional support to the historical evidence we have on the organizational structure of merchant empires. • Andrew Schein - Estimates of Palestine’s, Jordan’s Lebanon’s and Syria’s per capita GDP from 1820-1950
This paper builds upon Pamuk's (2006) study of economic growth in the Middle East from 1820 and offers alternative estimates of Palestine’s, Jordan's, Lebanon's and Syria's per capita GDP in 1990 international dollars for the benchmark years 1820, 1870, 1913 and 1950. The estimates are based are studies of each country and first hand reports of the conditions of the areas from the end of the 18th century through 1950. Based on these estimates, the economies of the four areas began to grow slowly in the 19th century and for the period from 1913-1950 they were some of the fastest growing economies in the world. • Jacob Louis Weisdorf - First Industrial Revolution: Why England, not France This study estimates the number of working days per year of a representative household required to obtain a basic consumption basket for the period 1500-1800. These are compared with independent estimates of days worked per year in London and Paris. While Parisian workers had to engage in a year-long grind to buy the fixed basket, London workers display a widening gab between days worked and days required to get the basket, especially between 1600 and 1750. This suggests that an industrious revolution and a consumer revolution were a stimulus to the England’s Industrial Revolution, whereas no such episodes were detectable for France. • Tangjun Yuan F9 -
Global warming and climate change Session abstract: Show Session abstract: Hide The objective of this session is to sharpen understanding of the impact and human response to major climate events in the past and present. There is an opportunity to learn from past variation in weather conditionsdroughts, floods, heat, excessive cold and their impact on economic and social conditions, productivity, demography, migration, and disease environmentsand actions taken to mitigate or adapt. Historical experiences can provide insights for evaluating contemporary patterns. At the same time, current climate-related effects on economies and societies can provide conjectures for better understanding past events. Organizer: • - Droughts, Floods and Financial Markets in the United States
The relationships among the weather, agricultural markets, and financial markets have long been of interest to economic historians, but relatively little empirical work has been done. We push this literature forward by using modern drought indexes, which are available in detail over a wide area and for long periods of time to perform a battery of tests on the relationship between these indexes and sensitive indicators of financial stress. Participants: • Richard Steckel - Droughts, Floods and Financial Markets in the United States
The relationships among the weather, agricultural markets, and financial markets have long been of interest to economic historians, but relatively little empirical work has been done. We push this literature forward by using modern drought indexes, which are available in detail over a wide area and for long periods of time to perform a battery of tests on the relationship between these indexes and sensitive indicators of financial stress. • Price Fishback - The Economic Response to Weather Shocks in the Farm Sector: The United States, 1895 to 1969 We use a 75-year panel of U.S. state information to identify the effect of weather fluctuations on the prices and quantities of cotton and corn. Corn is chosen to represent crops for which there are local markets as well as national markets, while cotton prices are set primarily in a national market. The paper shows how prices and output respond in these markets to weather shocks before and after federal agricultural subsidies are introduced. • Sok Chul Hong - Climate and Historical U.S. Farm Productivity: Relation to the Changing Disease Environment Paper summary: Show Paper summary: Hide We consider the impact of weather on farm values through U.S. history. Using both cross-sectional and panel methods, we document economically and statistically significant differences in the response of farm productivity to weather over time. In recent decades, farm value has been (weakly) increasing in temperature and rainfall. On the other hand, high levels of temperature or rain depressed farm value in the 19th century. This suggests an important role for technological adaptation in reducing the impact on farm productivity of hotter and wetter weather (a possible outcome of climate change in some places). One particular adaptation---the eradication of malaria---accounts for a substantial fraction of this difference over time. These results also suggest that malaria reduced farm productivity by a factor of 2-3 in the most malarious parts of the South relative to the Plains in the late 1800s. • Cormac O'Grada - Did climate matter? The Little Ice Age and economic growth Paper summary: Show Paper summary: Hide We look at several recent estimates of climate in Europe and find that climate in northwestern Europe between the 13th and 19th centuries was essentially constant, so that whatever variations in economic growth that occurred at this time were not due to climatic change. • Alan L. Olmstead • Paul Rhode - Adjusting to Climatic Variation: Historical Perspectives from North American Agricultural Development Providing greater historical perspective would enlighten current discussions about future human responses to climatic variation. During the 19th and 20th centuries, new biological technologies allowed North American farmers to push cropping into environments previously thought too arid, too variable, and too harsh to cultivate. We document these changes for three major staple crops noting that the climatic challenges that previous generations of farmers overcame often rivaled the climatic changes predicted for the next hundred years in North America. Further analysis is needed to understand the timing, causes, and costs of these adjustments. • Richard Sutch - The Impact of the 1936 Corn-Belt Drought on American Farmers' Adoption of Hybrid Corn The severe drought in 1936 revealed an advantage of hybrid corn not previously recognized – its drought tolerance. This revealed ecological resilience motivated some farmers to adopt hybrids despite their commercial unattractiveness in normal years. But that response to climate change had a tipping effect. The increase in sales of hybrid seed in 1937 and 1938 financed research at private seed companies that led to new varieties with significantly improved yields in normal years. This development provided the economic incentive for late adopters to follow suit. Because post-1936 hybrid varieties conferred advantages beyond improved drought resistance, the negative ecological impact of the devastating 1936 drought had the surprising, but beneficial, consequence of moving more farmers to superior corn seed selection. G9 -
Economics of Wars of the 20th Century Session abstract: Show Session abstract: Hide
Overall, here in this session the papers will address the economic mobilization, and the impacts of the world wars and other 20th century “total war” type conflicts. We are particularly interested in the interaction of political and economic factors in affecting the armaments production and choice sets, and the short and long run implications of those choices in these conflicts. The empirical results and theoretical interaction should prove beneficial for the understanding of not only the world wars but also their legacies for total war, as well as the spending and procurement behavior of states in history. Organizers: • • Jari Antero Eloranta - Master and Slave? Equal partners? Economic Relations between Germany and Finland during the Second World War Participants: • Irina Bystrova - Military-economic integration of the Soviet bloc in the 1950s-1970s
In the Cold War period when Soviet bloc of countries was organized, a unified and centrally planned (the center was in Moscow) system of arms production and deliveries inside of that bloc was formed. This was an example of military-economic integration of a whole group of countries of Eastern and Central Europe. • Price Fishback - Does Large-Scale Military Spending Stimulate Local Economies? Studies of the development of local economies often point to large-scale World War II military spending as a source of long-term economic growth, even though the spending declined sharply after the demobilization. We examine the longer term impact of the temporary war spending on county economies using a variety of measures of socioeconomic activity: including per capita retail sales, the extent of manufacturing, population growth, the share of women in the work force, housing values and ownership, and per capita savings over the period 1940-1950. We find that in the longer term counties receiving more war spending per capita during the war experienced extensive growth due to increases in population but not intensive growth, as the war spending had very small impacts on per capita measures of economic activity. • Neil Forbes - Mobilising workers for war: armaments manufacturers in the English West Midlands and the coming of the Second World War.
In preparing to fight the Second World War, contemporaries appreciated, and historians have analysed, how the mobilisation of the civilian population - especially the industrial workforce - represented a crucial factor in developing economic capacity. The debate over how far Britain was able to prepare for war in 1939 continues to oscillate between those take a 'declinist' view of national political-economic resources and those who emphasise British economic and military power in the interwar years. However the condition of Britain's political economy is characterised, it is generally assumed that resources were allocated on a co-ordinated basis because of a high level of tri-partite co-operation between government, employer bodies and organised labour. This facilitated the re-armament drive and helped Britain enter the war unified. This paper seeks to examine the question of industrial mobilisation, by an integrationist and interventionist British state, in the context a region - the West Midlands - that was of particular importance for the re-armament effort. Combining technologically-advanced manufacturing with traditional metal-working interests, the region was able to escape the worst elements of the Depression. The particular expertise in engineering and metal fabrication of motor manufacturers made this industrial conurbation an obvious choice for the development of the shadow factory scheme from 1936 and, with aircraft production made a priority, the location for an array of dedicated facilities. • Mark Harrison - Russia's Real National Income, 1913 to 1928 We are working towards filling the last remaining gap in the historical national accounts of Russia and the USSR in the twentieth century. This gap is formed by the final year (1913) of Gregory's national accounts for Tsarist Russia, and the initial year (1928) of Bergson's national accounts for the USSR, both on a GNP basis. The gap includes World War I (1913 to 1917), the Civil War (1918 to 1921), and postwar recovery under a mixed economy (1921 to 1928). Our work builds on that of our predecessors including Gatrell, Gregory, Kafengaus, Litoshenko, Prokopovich, and Vainshtein, and also returns to a number of original sources. Our preliminary findings are that the economic performance of the Russian Empire in wartime was somewhat better than previously thought; that of War Communism was correspondingly worse. Our figures confirm the persistence of losses associated with the Civil War into the postwar period, or the failure of the New Economic Policy to achieve full recovery, or some mixture of both. Our findings remain tentative. • Andrei Markevich - Russia's Real National Income, 1913 to 1928 We are working towards filling the last remaining gap in the historical national accounts of Russia and the USSR in the twentieth century. This gap is formed by the final year (1913) of Gregory's national accounts for Tsarist Russia, and the initial year (1928) of Bergson's national accounts for the USSR, both on a GNP basis. The gap includes World War I (1913 to 1917), the Civil War (1918 to 1921), and postwar recovery under a mixed economy (1921 to 1928). Our work builds on that of our predecessors including Gatrell, Gregory, Kafengaus, Litoshenko, Prokopovich, and Vainshtein, and also returns to a number of original sources. Our preliminary findings are that the economic performance of the Russian Empire in wartime was somewhat better than previously thought; that of War Communism was correspondingly worse. Our figures confirm the persistence of losses associated with the Civil War into the postwar period, or the failure of the New Economic Policy to achieve full recovery, or some mixture of both. Our findings remain tentative. • Pablo Martin Aceña - WAR AND ECONOMICS: THE FINANCE OF THE SPANISH CIVIL WAR REVISITED Paper summary: Show Paper summary: Hide
WAR AND ECONOMICS: THE FINANCE OF THE SPANISH CIVIL WAR REVISITED. • Elena Martinez Ruiz - WAR AND ECONOMICS: THE FINANCE OF THE SPANISH CIVIL WAR REVISITED. The paper reviews how the Spanish civil war was financed in order to analyse how economic conditions affected the final outcome of the conflict. We present new evidence on the financial strategy and the volume of resources employed by the two combatant parties. Our analysis suggests, contrary to the established knowledge, there were no significant differences between the two sides neither in the quantity of funds used nor in their financial strategies. The available evidence shows that the volume of the financial resources spent by the two parties were similar. We also argue that external factors and the course of the war, and not the economic management of the Republican Government, were the determinant factors that explain the final outcome. Republicans` continuous military setbacks during the first year had a decisive impact on the expectations on the outcome of the war, and therefore on the credibility of the their currency which limited the capacity of the Republic to finance its war effort. This suggests that once the war began, it was military developments, which influenced the development of the economy, rather than the other way around. • Ilkka Nummela • Tetsuji Okazaki - Supplier Networks and Aircraft Production
The Japanese aircraft industry, which had been in a very small scale before the • M. Angeles Pons • Heikki Rantatupa • Jonas Scherner - German Industrial Productivity and Exploitation of Occupied Europe During World War II: New Insights from Revised German Import Statistics According to estimates made by the United States Strategic Bombing Survey after World War II, German industrial labor productivity grew significantly during the war, especially in 1940 and 1941. These estimates are based on the assumption that the intermediate input to sale ratios in the different industrial sectors remained constant over time. However, after the beginning of the war, German armament producers started to outsource the manufacturing of intermediate goods to other companies, especially to firms in occupied Europe. In order to trace the impact of such outsourcing, this paper re-estimates German imports on the basis of information given about payment flows. Official German import data are highly distorted, suggesting that German net imports during the war were almost insignificant. The re-estimation presented here, however, shows that Germany imported a tremendous quantity of goods from occupied countries, especially intermediate inputs for armament production. Consequently, it reveals that Germany’s industrial labor productivity grew much less than the United States Strategic Bombing Survey assumed. • Tamas Vonyo - The Bombing of Germany: The Geography of Wartime Dislocation in West German Industry
For nearly forty years, the mainstream interpretation of the West German economic miracle has been built on the reconstruction thesis, developed by the Hungarian economist Ferenc Jánossy to explain the extraordinary growth performance of war-shattered economies during the 1950s and early 1960s. Jánossy and his advocates in German historiography, Werner Abelshauser in particular, argued that World War II and the post-war settlement generated a labour-quality adjusted shortage of capital in the West German economy. Consequently, reconstruction growth in the 1950s was driven by capital deepening. Contrary to this widely accepted view, I aim to show that urban industry, which served as the engine of the economic miracle during the 1950s, faced labour scarcity, not capital shortage, after the war. • Charlie Whitham - MORE THAN A STEPCHILD? FOREIGN TRADE AND THE US COMMITTEE FOR ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
The CED was the most prominent business organisation of the 1940s, and is credited with influencing major tenets of US foreign economic policy (Bretton Woods and Marshall Plan). This achievement is remarkable given that from the outset the CED was at odds with the government over its core post war aim of immediately liberalising world trade. From its creation in 1942 at the behest of the Commerce Department, the CED fixed its gaze exclusively on devising internal methods of securing domestic employment when the bonanza of war production stopped. This was due to the theoretical mindset of the CED leadership, which subscribed to the Keynesian view that a nation’s overseas activity could only successfully be expanded after high domestic employment had been achieved – clashing directly with the Administration’s vision for the post war liberalisation of trade. Consequently, between 1943-45 the CED faced increasingly firm challenges from government circles over the role of international trade in achieving high domestic employment, the most notable being Will Clayton, Under-Secretary of State and a CED trustee, but also Harry Dexter White of the Treasury Department and economist Jacob Viner. What emerges is that remarkably, despite some forthright prodding from government circles, rigorous debate and not a little soul-searching, the CED withstood the encroachments of the liberal orthodoxy and ended the war not only endorsing – with only the barest of caveats – but also directly implementing the Keynesian mantra of prioritising domestic over foreign mechanisms for achieving high national employment and productivity. I9 -
Public activity of businessmen on the local and country level in 1800-1914 Session abstract: Show Session abstract: Hide
Even though there was just a little number of usinessmen, they were keeping a serious and various authority on public events in their hands and were very important participants of regeneration from corporate society to the civil one. Organizers: • • Lukáš Fasora - Brno entrepreneurs and the so-called workers' question 1861-1914 The article analyses the attitudes of publicly engaged entrepreneurs in Moravian capitol town Brno towards the local possibilities for improving the material lot of the working class, towards the developing workers' and trade union movement and towards projects for the building of social infrastructure. The primary focus at the local level is on the attitude of entrepreneurs to the question of building a society with improved social benefits and their contribution to the creation or indeed the elimination of the main points of friction between the bourgeoisie and working classes. • Milan Myška - ROTHSCHILD MANAGER PAUL KUPELWIESER, CREATOR OF THE SOCIAL SYSTEM OF AN INDUSTRIAL TOWN Manager Paul Kupelwieser (1843-1919), managing director of Vítkovice Coal and Ore Mining (1876-1892), was one of the first modern industrial managers in iron metallurgy and coal mining in the Czech lands and the Habsburg Monarchy. He was one of the pioneers of the idea, that successful and effective operation of a company must be ensured among others by the businessman’s activities outside the company, especially on a municipal policy level. He therefore showed direct activity or activity through the company management personnel, leading to the transformation of the industrial village of Vítkovice into a modern industrial town with all attributes. He prepared an urbanistic-architectural project of separating the manufacturing and residential spheres (construction of the so-called New Vítkovice – Westend with quality workers’ housing, construction of markets, a town hall, hotel etc.), the cultural and social infrastructure (schools for the workers’ children, hospitals, a Roman Catholic church etc.). He engaged a group of significant Viennese architects into these initiatives. The paper also solves the question, what motivated the manager to participate in municipal policy: /1/ the fact, that the dynamic development of the Vítkovice iron works threatened with a functional collapse, the solution of which would be beyond the control of municipal councils, made up of small townsmen, farm owners etc. /2/ The discharge of the communal-political office meant the acquisition of certain prestige and it was considered in the public opinion as evidence of responsibility for the development of the municipality. /3/ the membership in municipal councils offered the businessmen the chance to participate in deciding, how to dispose of taxes and contributions which were paid to the municipality by the companies. Private business plans were therefore carried out under the veil of public interest (social expenditures, construction of infrastructure, educational institutions). K. used his experiences in Vítkovice in the year 1919 when drawing up the project “Vorschläge für die Gestaltung Deutschösterreichs”. Participants: • Ewald Hiebl - Social prestige and political participation – the public engagement of businessmen in the saline-town Hallein (Austria) in the late 19th century
It is necessary to adapt the concept of businessmen to the specific situation of a small town. Businessmen are seen as the economically successful parts of middle class and differ from the petty bourgeoisie that enter a state of crisis at the end of 19th century. Businessmen can be found in three different subgroups of middle class: the bourgeoisie, an urban economic elite“ and the well of businessmen and manufacturers. Members of the bourgeoisie were present in urban social life only as patrons of associations and festivities as well as donors of endowments. Moreover they enjoyed high prestige by their living-style as for example their luxurious mansions. They were not active as members of the managing committees of urban associations. Their social relations were supra-regionally oriented. The urban economic elite, on the other hand, was active in urban and regional politics but its members did not play an important role in the managing committees of local associations. They mainly supported the liberal idea, were very active in funding the local public relief and cultural activities. The members of the urban economic elite“ also took part in the local festivities. • Milan Hlavacka - The Entrepreneur as Mayor – The Mayor as Entrepreneur. On the Hořovice example of 1860 – 1914 Within the Czech environment, businessmen and self-government were inseparably linked. It would be possible to find similar examples of the symbiosis between enterprising individuals, i.e. Czech self-made men and municipal activities in every Czech town. Enterprise and self-government complemented each other and even sought each other out. A wealthy, or wealthier, merchant, factory owner or a mere tradesman, like today, expanded in one phase of their business dealings their area of activities from commercial or industrial activity to a wider community. Simultaneously they utilised consumer opportunities in their community as well as their earlier entrepreneurial, credit and organizational experience. Mayors – businessmen very often considered the administration of a community and its finances as the management of a prosperous enterprise. The post of mayor or merely their participation at the meetings of the Municipal Council provided them with respect, economic information, connections and perhaps a market for their products. In many instances municipal politics was also the starting block towards becoming Land Deputies. Yet, only rarely were these representatives of small and middle businesses willing to expand their political activities to the Assembly of Deputies of the Viennese Imperial Council. They mostly left this political activity, carried out beyond their own town and region, to the so-called free professionals, primarily Prague lawyers and notables. • Roman Holec - On the problems of the public engagement of the Slovak and Hungarian business elites in the 19th century
The first generation of businessmen from northern Hungary (1. the dominant Hungarian and German businessmen, 2. mostly assimilating Jewish businessmen, 3. foreign businessmen few in number, but of considerable importance, 4. marginal Slovak businessmen) already contributed to various features of the public activities. We can assume that various stimuli influenced their behaviour. The first was examples from contemporary cities, where measures to limit the worst forms of poverty had already functioned for a long time. Very varied forms of charity also existed among the richest citizens. The second stimulus was the way of life and behaviour strategy of the nobility, which were imitated by members of the rich city and business communities. A third stimulus was foreign influence. A fourth stimulus was the wish to gain noble status and achieve a high social position. Clearly, this only came into account in the case of non-Slovak businessmen. On the other side Slovak businessmen placed themselves in the service of the national movement, which meant that all the activities he developed were oriented towards the benefit of the “whole nation” • Pavel Kladiwa - PUBLIC INVOLVEMENT OF BUSINESSMEN ON THE LOCAL AND REGIONAL LEVEL IN MORAVIA BEFORE WORLD WAR I. The study deals with main spheres of the public engagement of the Moravian entrepreneurs in the 19th century. The public activity is perceived as the end in of the social function i.e. role of the entrepreneurs in the society. This role was determined by the position or the employer, and generally a prestige position ensuing from the ownership economic, cultural and social capital. Analysis of public activity of the entrepreneurs is divided in two parts in this article. The first part deals with activity immediately connected with professional interests and position of the entrepreneur: with building of company social systems motivated by rational reasons, imposing pressure on local administration, publicity activity having a task of establishing favourable perception of the entrepreneur at public, making blunt the pressure of social democracy, and further the activity in commerce and business chambers. The second part deals with activities of the entrepreneur, which resulted rather from their growing position at the social ladder, then from the affiliation to the upper stratus: execution of the mandate in the country diet or empire counsel and political activity generally, charitable activity, association’s activity, support of art, and engagement in religion communities. • Stanislav Knob - BUSINESSMEN OF THE OSTRAVA-KARVINÁ MINING DISTRICT AND THEIR INVOLVEMENT IN THE WORKERS’ ISSUE UNTIL THE FIRST WORLD WAR The Ostrava-Karviná mining district concentrated an enormous number of workers, especially in mining, metallurgy and the textile industry. The numerous working class was a relatively restless part of the population, as is testified by the number and size of strikes which took place in this region, especially at the turn of the 19th and 20th century. Literature of Marxist origin accredited this fact to the bad policy of separate businessmen towards the working class. Today’s research concieves this issue as a more complex interaction of many factors. • Judit Pál - The Economic Elite "in the Service of the Nation". Three Careers from Nineteenth-century Transylvania
The present article attempt to present the differences in the embourgeoisement of the three main national groups in Transylvania (the Romanians, Hungarians, and Germans/Saxons), the various possibilities of and paths taken by the entrepreneurs, their public engagement and role in the public life, the mentality underpinning it, and at what extent did nationality and religion influence their role in the public life. • Hana Šustková - Entrepreneurs in Communal and Country Politics of the Austrian Silesia in the second half of the 19th century
Suffrage both active and passive was limited only to smaller part of the population of Habsburg Empire – liberal constitution both from February and December in 1867 preferred in the access to the civil rights those who brought greater values to the state both materially and spiritually. Austrian Silesia was interwoven of industry network. On the West, it was particularly textile factories (flax, cotton, and wool enterprises), leather industry, also stone industry, machinery and chemical industry. On the East, black-coal mining complexes, iron works, and chemistry plant and textile factories again were spread. General examples of engagement of the entrepreneurs in the communal and land politics of Austrian Silesia may be divided into three spheres of activity: effecting on the communal level, effecting on the land level, and the role at establishing of political associations and parties. J9 -
The economic efficiency of peasant institutions, their impact on economic growth, and relevance to the problem of the “Great Divergence.” Session abstract: Show Session abstract: Hide
Sheilagh Ogilvie has encouraged economic historians to continue their examination of the relationship between institutions and the economy, with some very important caveats. This session at Utrecht will follow up on her suggestion that scholars consider more carefully the “efficiency implications” of institutions in their various activities. Institutions such as guilds, religious organizations, markets, and the state have been shown to have important implications for economic efficiency. These studies invite deeper explorations into institutions at the village level, thus bringing the majority of the pre-modern human population into the frame. Organizer: • Participants: • Gareth Austin - Reconsidering Markets in Precolonial West Africa, c1450-1890: Structure, Function and Process The first generation of continuous professional study of West African economic history focussed on the extent to which resources in precolonial economies were allocated in accordance with a logic of relative scarcity, as envisaged in market economics, and as advocated by the ‘formalist’ as against ‘substantivist’ schools of economic history and economic anthropology. In the 1970s this debate was essentially resolved in favour of the ‘formalist’ position, expressed in a classic synthesis by A. G. Hopkins (1973). Following that, research moved on from a focus on the calculus of individual decision-making to the structures conditioning individual transactions. Meanwhile, however, without attracting much attention from synthesisers or theorists, monographic research has revealed a lot more about market behaviour and institutions in these periods. This paper argues that the formalist understanding of precolonial economies has been reinforced and refined by this research. Sections 1 and 2 briefly review the original debate and subsequent contributions, and argues that after 1973 a perhaps surprising degree of de facto consensus emerged behind the main formalist propositions, from scholars with rather diverse disciplinary and ideological perspectives. The paper proceeds to explore the issues further. Section 3 considers the implications of the last 36 years’ research for the analysis of the ‘structure and function’ of markets in the domestic economies of precolonial West Africa (‘structure and function’ was the sub-title of Hopkins’ chapter on the domestic economies). Section 4 makes a rather speculative attempt to advance the cause of properly historicising the subject, by inquiring into the origins of the relatively high level of market-orientation in West African economies that was evident by 1650 or 1800, and considering the internal dynamics of domestic markets in interaction with apparently exogenous forces as the nature and extent of market activity evolved from over the period preceding colonization. The presentation will link the analysis more precisely to the issues of rural institutions and 'the Great Divergence' which are the focus of the session. • Daniel Bromley - The Economic Reach of the State: African Development Reconsidered African economic development is stifled because most countries are notional states. The notional state must not be confused with rhetoric of corruption and failed states. Rather, the effective reach (in a spatial sense) of the African state is efficiently attenuated in virtue of the benefits and costs of extending coherent governance beyond the capital city. This stands in stark contrast to the concept and the practice of nation building and the state as it evolved over centuries in Western Europe. In Europe, strong states evolved out of a necessity to protect valuable agricultural assets during an era in which land-based wealth was paramount. European states became strong because they could not afford to be weak. African states are weak because they have no good reasons to be strong. The “mask of citizenship” reflects reciprocal estrangement between citizens and the government. Colonialism in Africa did nothing to extend the effective reach of the state, and post-independence governments have found no good reasons to do so. The essential step to extend the reach of governance beyond the capital city is the tax bargain in which all individuals would contribute to the public purse. This will gradually mobilize revenue for the provision of missing collective consumption goods and services. Of greater import, the tax bargain will give “voice” to those in rural areas and will force central governments to listen to demands for coherent governance. Only then will economic development be possible. • Kent G. Deng - Grassroots Institutions in Traditional China
This paper uses the factual approach to challenge the conventional wisdom and argues that traditional Chinese villages were based on near-universal private ownership. Landholding concentration was not obvious until the 1930s. Rent was light by medieval Japanese and European standards. Villages were highly autonomic in internal administration, law and order and external security. There was also internal division of labour and sectors. The head of the village was elected and did not even have to own land. After 1978, China’s villages gradually rebuilt its timeless institutions which contributed China’s explosive growth in the past 30 years. • Penelope Francks - Rural Institutions and the Japanese Path to Development: a Survey This paper begins from the assumption that, contrary to the conclusions of much of the earlier literature on Japan’s rural history, the development of the rural economy can be viewed as successful, over the long term, in terms of output growth, improving living standards and relative equality. However, a number of Japanese scholars are now coming to argue that this success was heavily conditioned by institutional structures originating in the pre-modern period, with the result that the path of economic development and industrialisation that Japan was to follow differed in significant respects from that described in the standard narrative of the industrial revolution on the western side of the Great Divergence. The paper provides brief surveys of English- and Japanese-language research into the economic effects, from the pre-modern period into the era of modern industrialisation, of (1) the institutions of government and taxation; (2) land tenure, inheritance and cultivation rights; (3) the village as an institution; (4) household labour and the labour market and (5) technology and the organisation of production. It thereby seeks to show how the pre-modern institutional structure generated a pattern of economic growth within which the small-scale, multi-functional household unit was able to survive and develop, over the course of industrialisation. The implications of this for the position of the Japanese case in the Great Divergence debate are briefly suggested, as a prelude to the session’s comparative discussion and analysis. • Philip Slavin - "The Divergence between the Demesne and Tenancy in Late-Medieval England, c.1320-1450: Institutions or Ecology? Or Perhaps, Both?" Paper summary: Show Paper summary: Hide
• Alessandro Stanziani - Serfdom, bondage and the labour-intensive path in the eurasiatic development, 17th-19th century
The so called “second serfdom” In Russia and eastern Europe was a much more flexible and efficient system than usually believed. In the estates, the “agency” problems were solved not only on the ground of economic considerations but also in response to the peculiar way institutions and actors interacted. Peasants’ leaders, landlords and bailiffs were much more in coordination than in opposition between them. Evidence suggests that the output of both agricultural produce and proto-industrial products increased throughout the 18th and 19th century; in turn, this sustained the demand for manufactured goods that was mostly satisfied by local proto-industrial activity utilizing labour-intensive technology. • Eric Vanhaute • Simone A. Wegge - Inheritance Institutions in 19th Century German Villages and Their Influence on Economic Outcomes Paper summary: Show Paper summary: Hide This paper examines property institutions in the nineteenth century in the German principality of Hesse-Cassel to investigate the variety of customs used and the effect that these institutions may have had on urbanization patterns and on the socioeconomic structure of the villages and towns. Data on over 1,000 towns and villages has been assembled from a 1850s community survey. In the principality of Hesse-Cassel, inheritance as a property institution mattered in important ways and affected the economic and social aspects of people’s lives. Impartible villages had larger families, and possibly less population growth. The economic structure of the two types of villages differed as well, as there were more artisans in partible villages and more laborers and farmers in impartible villages. With higher populations, more factories, higher land prices, greater numbers of “other” artisans, and more regular markets, partible villages had a more urban character. Land distributions also varied by inheritance tradition: impartible villages had land distributions where the average farmer had more land, but where land holdings were more unequal than in the partible communities. Lastly, religious minorities congregated in different places, whereby Jews tended to be in the partible villages and in cities, while Catholics tended to be in the impartible places at high elevations. L9 -
Re-inventing the European City: Challenges and Responses since 1950 Session abstract: Show Session abstract: Hide
This session will discuss the changes and challenges that European cities have faced since 1950. Focus will be on how de-industrialisation, globalisation, the rise of the tertiary sector and European integration have influenced urban as well as regional development. The session will also consider in what ways city authorities have responded to the post-industrial challenges, including for example the knowledge economy, a communications revolution and the turn to a high-tech industrial production, and which strategies cities have used to meet the new conditions. What will be of greatest interest is the ways in which the new city strategies have evolved from the interplay of the global forces and local politics. Organizer: • - Re-inventing the European City: Challenges and Responses since 1950: An Introduction This paper gives a short introduction to the session Re-inventing the European City: Challenges and Responses since 1950. Three aspects are considered: (i) challenges posed by major urban transformations during the turn to post-industrialism, (ii) trends in West European urban population growth rates since 1950, and (iii) how globalisation, deindustrialisation, European integration, and other processes as well may have affected the West European urban system. The findings indicate a switch of urban growth centres from south to north, and on the transnational level a weakly integrated urban system throughout the period. Besides, a time schedule for the session is enclosed. Participants: • Eugenia Bournova - 1950-2000: from urbanization and industrialization to population stagnation and services Paper summary: Show Paper summary: Hide Based on the commercial guides of the 1950s I will attempt to map the industrial activity along Pireos Street, which is the most important industrial axis of the Greek capital. The 10km-long Pireos Street connects the city of Athens with the city’s port Piraeus. In the first decades that followed the end of the Second World War, manufacturing plants were built along this street leading to substantial population concentration. Towards the end of the 20th century the use of these industrial buildings changed with significant repercussions for Pireos Street, which is now used to carry the residents of Athens and Piraeus in large and crowded nightclubs. • José Maria Cardesin - ‘Galicia, besieged by hazard’: the contradictions between industrial rationalization programmes and urban development in NW Spain (1960-2000) This paper focuses on urbanization and territory. It is the result of research carried out by historians, sociologists and anthropologists and applies a ‘trouble case studies’ methodology. On 13 January 1998, the ‘Discoverer Enterprise’, a floating oil rig under construction in the dockyards of the city of Ferrol (NW Spain), cast off its moorings and finally crashed into the most important - and practically the only - bridge that connected the city with its estuary and region, cutting off traffic for more than two months. The collapse of the local road network engendered a number of problems in terms of production, reproduction and consumption. It highlighted more general insufficiencies in communications, and the underlying contradictions affecting territorial organisation and regional urban development over the last fifty years. This case study enables us to review several ideas about the impact of the transition to democracy and membership of the EU on Spain’s urban system. • Rolf Hugoson - Building the Creative City: The Dynamics of Professional Networks
In my research on the recent history of the municipality of Umeå, a regional capital in Northern Sweden, documents highlighting the importance of local professional networks in the epoch 1950-2000 has been gathered. Such networks apparently made it easier to create viable policies or projects in various fields, e.g. education, health, town planning and transportation. However, the local policy-making capacity of professional networks did not just depend upon their exclusive professional knowledge. As will be demonstrated, even more important was the agents’ previous experience of networking. Local government was characterised by a specific kind of political know-how, where tactics and social capital were at least as important as ideology. • Harm Kaal - Livability and urban policies in Amsterdam after WWII Paper summary: Show Paper summary: Hide This paper explores Amsterdam’s struggle with modern and ‘post-industrial’ times. After the Second World War Amsterdam, more in particular its urban government, was at odds with the city’s socio-economic status and its need to metropolise. In the 1950s and 60s an ambitious urban government envisioned a future for Amsterdam as a centre for industry and as a metropolis with a population around one million at the end of the century. In order to keep up with ‘modern’ times, Amsterdam needed to rebuild its historic City in order to lure big businesses, had to improve its infrastructure – roads, railways, subways, tunnels and bridges – build new residential districts and improve the old neigborhoods within the 19th century city limits. Whereas urban government almost unanimously saw the modernization of Amsterdam as both inevitable and imperative in order to improve the city’s national and international competitive position, the citizenry at times opposed many of the ‘megalomaniac’ future plans. As such, the late 1960s, 1970s and early 1980s witnessed a remarkable involvement of parts of the citizenry in the debate about the future of their city. Their argument centred around the notion of livability; the city’s livability was said to be threatened by the government’s plans to attract chemical industries or its willingness to destroy parts of the old city centre in order to improve the infrastructure. All in all, the 1970s in particular turned out to be a decade of disillusionment for the Amsterdam governors: they finally had to acknowledge the fact that Amsterdam was not equipped to be an industrial city and, yielding to public pressure, played down their ambitions for the future development of the city. This paper discusses this tension between on the one hand the aim to create a ‘livable’ city and on the other the urge to modernize and metropolise Amsterdam. • Jesús Mirás Araujo - Commentator • Marjaana Niemi - Living with Diversity: Helsinki and Stockholm after 1970 Paper summary: Show Paper summary: Hide
We believe that diversity fosters innovation. From Jane Jacobs to Richard Sennett, urban theorists have emphasized that diversity and tolerance to diversity are essential prerequisites for creativity, which in turn is a major driving force behind dynamic urban development. In her influential book, The Death and Life of Great American Cities (1961), Jacobs advocated dense, mixed-use neighbourhoods where buildings varied in age and condition and where streets bustled with people from all walks of life. Three decades later, in 1993, when her book was re-published and when cities were facing new challenges posed by globalization, Jacobs prescribed the same medicine as in the early 1960s – neighbourhoods that support urban diversity. Richard Sennett emphasizes that creating diversity and complexity is only the first part of what we need to do to create better cities. We also need to make the complexities a city contains actually interact. If cities want to become more creative, it is important that people come together – and they are brought together – in different ways and for different purposes, and that they learn to live with strangers. • Magda Pinheiro - The making of Lisbon's Metropolis: Population Growth, Industry, Services and Globalization
The aim of this paper is to describe the changes experienced by the Lisbon’s Metropolis in its very beginnings after 1950. Industrialization and population growth were, until the end of the sixties related to an import substitution process. Investments were concentrated in the heavy industry both in the south bank of Tagus and in the East of Lisbon.. In the seventies export oriented industries developed as de-industrialization began in Europe. M9 -
Institutional innovation or passing fad? The function and performance of exchange banks in Early Modern Europe Session abstract: Show Session abstract: Hide
A remarkable economic phenomenon in 15th and 16th century Europe is the appearance of exchange banks, first in Spain and Italy, and later in Germany and the Dutch Republic. Equally remarkable is the patchy record of those banks. Having as core functions currency stabilization and the organization of a secure payments system, they looked very much alike, but in fact their Organizers: • • Oscar Gelderblom Participants: • Erik Aerts - No Public Exchange Banks in The Southern Netherlands. Explanation of an Absence (1400-1800) Paper summary: Show Paper summary: Hide
abstract • Jacques Bottin - How to clear payments without a central bank ? The French case (XVIth-XVIIth centuries) Paper summary: Show Paper summary: Hide
During the end of the XVIth century, the Lyon fairs secure the national as well as the international payments in France. Early XVIIth century seems to be a turning point in the organisation of the French payment system as it gets more and more linked, first to the Antwerp, then also to the Amsterdam and London exchange. • Dror Goldberg - Anglo-American Banking Before the Glorious Revolution Paper summary: Show Paper summary: Hide The absence of a major exchange bank in England before 1694 was an unusual fact for an economically savvy Western European country. Englishmen yearned for a continental-style exchange bank but knew that the constitutional issues had to be resolved first. The 1640 confiscation of coin and bullion in the Tower of London and a major 1672 Crown default (‘Stop of the Exchequer’) were most damaging to the prospects of any bank. Until the political circumstances allowed the creation of a major bank, Englishmen wrote about banking ideas and experimented these very creative ideas in the relatively free and coin-starved American colonies. They divided their coin holdings between a decentralized system of small banks (goldsmith-bankers) and their backyards. These circumstances, so different from much of the continental experience, may have caused the English in both the Old World and the New World to be among the pioneers of public and private paper money. • Regina Grafe • Claudio Marsilio - “Four times a year for so many years”. The Italian Exchange Fairs during the XVIth-XVIIth Centuries The Genoese fairs inherited the features of a time-honoured institution which improved itself through the subsequent stages of Geneva, Lyon Piacenza and finally Novi. This economic and financial institution reached its zenith between the end of the 16th Century and the beginning of the 17th Century; starting from 1580 almost all European International transactions were settled right in Piacenza fairs of exchange every three months. During the 16th and 17th Centuries the Genoese bankers offered many financial services all around Europe at such high levels that not many competitors were able to contrast them. This paper aims to show that their success was due to their preminent role in financing the Spanish Monarchy from the first loans of the 16th century - the asiento - to, at least, the last years of the 17th Century. At “Bisenzone”, Genoese bankers raised money for these loans from a variety of sources reducing the risks of lending and funded the king's long-term obligations via short term loans. The prime mover of the Genoese exchange fairs was - more than International commerce - the huge volume of transactions generated by the Spanish Crown’s public debt and the financial speculations of the most influential European financial operators (Genoese and Florentine above all). Piacenza and later on Novi became the main operating market where an increasing number of operators coming from all the European trading markets were gathered together and where the volume of transactions multiplied. In 1621, the Genoese bankers decided in a high-ended manner to transfer the seat of the fair to Novi, on the territory of their independent Republic, producing a long lasting rupture in the Italian bankers’network. The exchange fairs of Novi created an efficient financial network under Genoese control and permitted arbitrage among the other northern Italian financial markets (Piacenza, Verona, Bolzano). • Paul Thomes - Informal vs. Formal Structures: The Municipality as Exchange Bank in Early Modern German Territories Paper summary: Show Paper summary: Hide
This paper discusses the necessity and specification of exchange banking structures in small and medium size cities. It tries to explain the absence of exchange banks as visible institutions as a matter of dimension and frequency respectively transaction costs. The assumptions to be discussed are: Money exchange was an everyday need even in small cities because of the currency diversity in17th and 18th century, and so were credit transactions. Up to a certain transaction volume municipalities handled the business internally within the exchequer, the treasurers being experts in this field of financial services. In certain cases however they had to make use of external experts. Needless to say that money exchange was not the only business of those informal banks like deposit and credit transactions. • François Velde - The case of the missing public bank: Early Modern France Before John Law's well-known bank, France did not have any public bank, either on the Amsterdam/Hamburg or on the England model. I examine the different projects proposed from the 1550s to 1715 and explain why they failed to succeed. One reason is the existence of a primitive but efficient payments system, the Lyon payments, which I also discuss. N9 -
Female Economic Strategies - Work, Family or Public Assistance Session abstract: Show Session abstract: Hide
The aim of the session is to analyse the economic strategies adopted by women without a male breadwinner; widows, spinsters and unmarried mothers. To explore how these women structured their lives to attain economic security, if this was done with the help of family members, through employment or by turning to public bodies like poor relief authorities for assistance. To assess how well the strategies functioned and if it was the destiny of these women to be economically marginalised. Organizer: • - Widows in Northern Europe and Strategies for Survival Paper summary: Show Paper summary: Hide
Widows in Northern Europe and Strategies for Survival Participants: • Antoinette Fauve-Chamoux • Anne-Lise Head-König - The economic strategies of unmarried women and widows (in Switzerland, from the mid-nineteenth to the mid-twentieth century). Paper summary: Show Paper summary: Hide The aim of the paper is twofold. First, to show how women attempted to cope with the material needs not only of their offspring, but also with those of other members of their family (mostly parents, siblings, etc.) for whom they were sometimes also obliged to offer the necessary assistance. We will see how difficult it was to reconcile the demands of both children and work as a result of the long working hours current in such sectors as were opened to them. In addition, the Poor Law authorities were always ready to take action when they considered that the upbringing of the children was inadequate and did not meet with their requirements. The second part of the paper will deal with the changes brought about by the creation of state social insurances, the first step being taken in the 1920s in order to help older people, but mainly with the creation in 1947 of the AVS (Assurance de vieillesse et survivants) for old people, widows and orphans.These changes partly reduced the necessity for women without a husband to work beyond the age of 65, but also benefited younger widows and to a lesser extent single women, as can be seen form the 1950 and 1960 census data. • Susannah Ottaway - Women as Mothers under the Old Poor Law Paper summary: Show Paper summary: Hide Historians have long realized that women figured prominently on the poor relief lists of early modern England, and much research has already been done on poor women's survival strategies. This paper re-examines the issue of assistance to women through the lens of poor women's roles as mothers. I explore the degree to which the poor laws interfered with the reciprocal obligations of mothers and children that were such an important feature of prescriptive literature on the family. More specifically, I will look at the ways in which the eighteenth-century workhouse, in both theory and practice, curtailed poor mothers' use of their children's labour and support. • Ana Patricia Sosa Ferreira • Maria Dolores Valverde Lamfus - Stratégies de survivance des femmes pauvres de Saint-Sébastien (Espagne) au début du XXème siècle Paper summary: Show Paper summary: Hide
En 1855, la première loi de Santé Publique espagnole, ordonnait à toutes les municipalités qui comptaient au-dessus de 10.000 habitants, de procurer aux familles pauvres l'assistance médicale et pharmaceutique gratuite. En premier lieu il fallait établir les limites de la pauvreté, établir au-dessous de quels revenus les pouvoirs et la société considéraient que l'on était pauvre. Toutes les années, la municipalité publiait un rencensement oú figuraient les chefs de familles admises au rang des pauvres. La première chose qui se dégage en étudiant ces listes, c'est la bien connue féminisation de la pauvreté. Dans des proportions très considérables, ce sont des femmes, chefs de famille, qui y sont enregistrées. Des veuves pour la plupart, avec ou sans enfant. • Verónica Villarespe Reyes - Mexico: Women and poverty 1994-2004. Progresa-Oportunidades Conditional Transfer Program
Nowadays the Conditional Cash Transfers Programmes (CCT), are orchestrated to overcoming the poverty. Example of these programs in Mexico, is the Education, Health and Feeding Program (Progresa-Oportunidades) established at the end of the 1990’s. Progresa-Oportunidades is centered in the “maternalism”. Poor women are incorporated in the Program’s design, but in a sense that they depends on the gender’s division for their success. Even if women could’ve been marginally empowered through handling the supports, the structure and operation of the Program reinforces the social divisions through which the gender asymmetries are reproduced. These asymmetries depend on women who carry out their “traditional” social papers and responsibilities. Progress-Opportunity is based on responsibilities normally assigned to the maternity, conditioning the cash transfers to a “good maternity”. In this paper there are analyzed referring data to the socioeconomic context of the woman in poverty in Mexico: the feminine headquarters in the poor homes; the labor inequality, the wage discrimination, the income, education and the governmental support of Progresa-Oportunidades to the women in poverty. The women in poverty who are family mothers make use of Progresa-Oportunidades with the expectation of which their daughters have access to a better life than them: in other words, it is a feminine strategy to survive. • Richard Wall - The economic situation of poorer widows in England The first issue considered is just how many widows whom the authorities at the time considered to be poor actually received assistance from the Poor Law while they lived in their own households or in the households of others. A second issue addressed is the share of the household budgets of widows that was derived from earnings, either their own or those of their children, or was provided by the Poor Law. Thirdly the income and expenditure patterns of widow headed households will be compared with those of labourers, taking acount of the differences in household size and numbers of adults and children. Other issues considered will be the proportion of the earnings of children living with their widowed mother that they actually contributed to the household budget, the extent of assistance received from adult children who had their own households to support, aid from other relatives, friends and neighbours and the contribution provided from cultivation of a garden and exploitation of waste or common land. P9 -
International Banking in Asia, 19th-20th centuries Session abstract: Show Session abstract: Hide
International Banking played important roles in foreign exchange transactions and capital movements during the 19th and 20th centuries: on the one hand, the International Banks were an important channel of long term capital export from the industrialized West to the peripheral Asia; but on the other, and foremost, the International Banks encouraged trade between Europe and Asia through credit and exchange operations. With the progress of transport and communication technologies in the second half of the 19th century, the International Banks supported the economic development of Asia. Such an image of International Banking, which criticizes the “Imperialist” schema, seems to have been approved in recent studies of economic history. Organizers: • - The Oriental Bank Corporation and the Decline of Silver Prices, 1842-1884
During the mid-nineteenth century the Oriental Bank Corporation was the most eminent Eastern exchange bank (British overseas bank) which played a leading role in international banking between Britain and Asia. After the 1870s, however, this unrivalled position gradually undermined and failed in 1884. Unfortunately, the history of the Bank has not been fully told so far and still belonged to a large neglected area of scholarship in British financial history because its business records were totally destroyed at the bankruptcy. • Youssef Cassis • Shizuya Nishimura - International banking in Asia and the Hongkong Bank, 1880-1914 In Asian trade foreign exchange business had long been monopolised by great British merchant houses and companies, but they were supplanted in this sphere of business by British exchange banks around the 1850s. Their preponderance, however, was threatened by the arrival of several non-British banks in the 1890s. However, they managed to survive and became successful again in the 1900s. Among them, the Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation had the most remarkable success. What enabled this bank to repel the competition of the other British banks and of the non-British ones? This is what this paper tries to elucidate. Participants: • Stefano Battilossi - Western Banks in Asia during the First Globalization Paper summary: Show Paper summary: Hide During the first globalization era, the number of banks from financially advanced Western countries with branches and subsidiaries in emerging peripheries of the world almost tripled, from 56 to 146. What drove their expansion abroad and determined their foreign location choice? The paper empirically explores this issue thanks to a unique data set that allows a global quantitative assessment of the magnitude, scope and spatial pattern of multinational banking (MNB) before 1914. The predictions of competing explanatory theories are tested on the base of an augmented gravity-like specification, comparable to the approach of recent studies of foreign direct investment and international trade of financial assets. Three main factors emerge as pulling forces of entry and expansion into foreign markets: the exploitation of rents created by trade dependence and colonial relationships; high information and monitoring costs due to geographical distance and low informational development; and macroeconomic instability. The results suggest that pre-1914 MNB was not mainly driven by gravity forces. Banks expanded relatively less into rich neighboring markets than into distant and relatively poor locations. Their decisions were influenced less by proximity (geographical, social, institutional) than diversity. Forces of spatial dependence also contributed to shape the financial geography of the globalizing economy. The paper tests this patten against the evidence of Western banks' location choices in Asia before 1914. • Hubert Bonin - French banking in Hong Kong (1860s-1940s): Challenging British banks? British banks asserted their hegemony on the Hong Kong market thanks to the powerful thalassocracy built by British trading houses all around Chinese harbours and rivers. French banks, along with German, Russian or Dutch, then also American, ones, tried and succeeded to establish bridgeheads in southern China. First Hong Kong became a platform used by French interests in colonial Indochina to manage business in the Chinese Sea area. Second French trading and shipping companies used Hong Kong as a foothold to get access to various outlets for manufactured goods or to pick up commodities. Last, French banks got access to a share of the Hong Kong local banking market itself, and thus enriched their portfolio of skills in proximity banking, in corporate banking, and in foreign exchange activities. • Makoto Kasuya - The Activities of a Japanese Bank in the Interwar Financial Centers: A Case of the Yokohama Specie Bank This paper aims to analyze the role of a branch of a Japanese bank in the internationals financial centers and its change during the Interwar period. Branches of international exchange banks generally buy bills for goods exported from where they exist, to collect bills for goods imported to where they exist, and to transfer funds with other branches. In addition to these “ordinary” businesses branches in the international financial centers raise funds by selling bills there or by borrowing money from other banks, to makes investments for securing reserves, and to advise letters of credit issued by large banks there. This paper sheds light on these activities of the Yokohama Specie Bank, which was the largest international exchange bank in Japan before the Second World War and shows that branches in London and New York facilitated the flow of funds within the bank. The Interwar period saw significant change in international money flow as New York grew to an international financial center, which was as important as London and also saw the Great Depression and international conflicts after that. This paper analyzes how businesses of the two branches changed in order to cope with turbulence in the financial markets. • Ranald Michie - The City of London and International Banking in the 19th and 20th centuries: The Asian Dimension Throughout the 19th and 20th centuries the City of London retained its position at the centre of international banking. This was despite competition from Paris and then Berlin in the 19th century and the rise of New York as a financial centre in the 20th. To many this is seen as a product of imperial links followed by inertia. By taking Asia as a case study, and looking specifically at the relationship between the City of London and China, India and Japan, the explanation is seen to revolve around the stregth and depth of the London money market and the corresspondent bank connections that were put in place and then maintained over the centuries. • Takeshi Nishimura - The Yokohama Specie Bank in the Osaka-Kobe Area before 1913: A Case of raw cotton trade between British India and Japan The purpose of this paper is to examine the activities of the Yokohama Specie Bank in the intra-Asian trading networks prior to 1913, focusing on the foreign-trade financing operations of the Bank in Osaka-Kobe area. Most of past researches of Japanese foreign-trade financing operations before 1913 are the analyses of the foreign-trade financing operations for silk exports mainly from Yokohama. Because silk was the leading export commodity during the Meiji and Taisho period, it is nature that most past researches took up silk exports as their research topic. This concentration on silk exports from Yokohama is vividly reflected in the past researches of the Yokohama Specie Bank. After the 1890s, however, not only Yokohama but also Kobe became the leading trading port and Osaka-Kobe area became as the center of Japanese industries since the 1890s. Osaka-Kobe area was the center of the Japanese industrialization, which mainly consisted of the cotton spinning and cotton textile industries. This paper attempts to pay special attention to the foreign-trade financing operations for raw cotton trade between Japan and British India and how the Yokohama Specie Bank, especially the Kobe and Bombay branches, contributed the business of Japanese cotton merchants in order to collect raw cotton in British India and to export them to Japan. • Ayumu Sugawara - The International Banking Corporation, 1902-1937
The purpose of this paper is to explore the nature of the business conducted by the branches of the International Banking Corporation (hereafter IBC) in London and China. In this overview on the IBC history from its establishment to the 1920s, it was shown that though the IBC could enlarge its business size during the First World War, it could not catch up with the leading international banks in Asia in the 1920s. The study on the Chinese branches of the IBC showed the following facts; • Gail Triner • Kazuhiko Yago - The Russo-Chinese Bank (1896-1910)
The aim of this paper is to examine the activities of the Russo-Chinese Bank (Русско-Китайский Банк) from the late 19th century to the beginning of the 20th century, focusing on the operations of the Bank in Russia and Asia. Q9 -
Histories of Famine in modern times. Session abstract: Show Session abstract: Hide
Rapid technological change since the time of Malthus has removed the threat of inevitable global imbalance in food supplies. But maintaining delivery of food to the world's population remains and is invariably complex, highlighted by recent food crises. Control over food is a major political and economic problem. When relief from shortages is inadequate, life is endangered and famine may occur. Organizers: • - Famine and Food Problems in non-occupied USSR, 1941-1947 This paper considers the famine of the immediate post war period 1946/47 in relation to the food problems experienced by the USSR in WW2 and to the impact of the weather conditions in the 1941-47 period. Many analysts claim that the famine conforms to a general Stalinist pattern of Stalin using the famine to punish the peasantry in circumstances where harsh procurements were not necessary. The evidence considered in this paper does not support such a claim. By contrast this paper argues that in terms of the timing and the nature of the extreme food problem this famine conforms to a general pattern of Soviet famines in which a number of years of urban food problems leads to pressure on the peasantry and a general reductions of stocks, which then places the country in a dangerous position when confronted by drought and harvest failure. • Stephen Morgan - The Henan Famine, 1942-43: Dearth and death in North-Central China during the World War Two Centred on Henan Province, China, the North-Central Plains Famine in 1942-43 claimed about 2-3 million lives and at least a similar number fled in search of food. In the 1920-30s, famine strucked the same region several time. Less than 20 years later, Henan was one of the worst affected areas of China’s Great Leap Forward (GLF) Famine of 1958-62 that claimed about 30 million lives, the worse famine in total deaths to date. Drawing on a variety of archive and recent Chinese-language research, this paper will explore the causes and consequences of the Henan famine. According to many contemporary accounts the famine was not just the consequence of nature’s cruelty to a region that has frequently been dealt a bad hand. It was primarily a famine resulting from human action and the folly of state policy in a front-line contested zone. Analysing the 1942 Henan famine helps shed light on the dynamics of the GLF famine. • Cormac O'Grada - Revisiting the Great Bengal Famine of 1943-44
The paper invokes archival and contemporary newspaper sources in arguing the case that while the Bengal famine occurred in a time of food scarcity, the fundamental reason for the famine was its wartime context, and the refusal of the authorities to prioritize the Bengal poor over the requirements of their military campaign. Participants: • John Barber - Leningrad, winter 1941-42: Coping with Catastrophe This paper examines recent research into mortality and survival during the famine resulting from the blockade of Leningrad by the German and Finnish armies that began in September 1941. With nearly three million civilians trapped in the city, rations soon at starvation level, public utilities at a standstill, and an exceptionally bitter winter, the death rate soared, producing a demographic catastrophe unprecedented in an urban setting and a developed country. Access to declassified Russian archives has made it possible to produce detailed analyses of 'nutritional dystrophy', the prime cause of death in the winter of 1941-42. At the same time, many people did not die, despite their rations apparently being incapable of sustaining life for more than a short period. The paper reviews documentary and oral sources that shed light on physiological and psychological factors that made for survival in appalling conditions. • Jean-Pascal Bassino - Market Integration and Famines in Early Modern Japan, 1717-1857 While enjoying a long period of peace under the rule of the Tokugawa (1603-1867), associated with regional specialization and a relatively high degree of market integration, the Japanese population experienced severe famines that claimed several hundred thousands lives. The most dramatic episodes of the 18th and 19th century occurred in 1731-1733, 1783-1786, and 1833-1838. As agricultural practices, crop mix, and degree of commercialization and specialization varied across Japan, it is worth considering the possibility of regional differences of economic systems in response to exogenous shocks. This paper evaluates the degree of market integration and investigates how regional markets functioned during famines. • Anthony Garnaut - What role has bad weather played in modern Chinese famines?
CCP leaders and academics have argued for fifty years over what role bad weather played in the Great Leap Famine of 1959-61. Some have claimed that it was entirely caused by natural disaster, while others have claimed that bad weather was not the main cause of the famine. However, the quality of the data presented in support of one or other argument have tended to be either highly selective or systemic biased: Liu Shaoqi's argument that weather was no more than 30% of the problem was based on the fact that the fishpond in his hometown had not entirely dried up whereas it had in a drought in his youth (sample size N = 1); Y.Y. Kueh's argument that the weather in the famine period was truly awful is based on analysis of natural disaster data, an official tally of the reported acreage where yields fell short of the highly ambitious levels set by the early Communist government. • Violetta Hionidou - What do starving people eat? The case of Greece through Oral History Paper summary: Show Paper summary: Hide
'Famine foods' seems a self-explanatory term but careful reading of the existing literature suggests otherwise. 'Famine foods' seem to suggest repulsive and unfamiliar foods consumed only in famine situations. This paper, using the Greek famine of 1941-43 as a case study, suggests that this is not the case. Starving people continue to use foods that they are familiar with or that other sections of the population are familiar with. The very poor sections of the population may well use fodder food, which nevertheless they are familiar with and which in most cases was also used by some of their members even in 'normal' times. • Bertie Lumey - Immediate and long term effects of the Dutch famine of 1944-1945.
Studies of men and women exposed to the Dutch famine of 1944-1945 (also known as the ‘Hunger winter’) during different periods of life (before birth, during early childhood or during adolescence) are important because they afford a rare opportunity to look at potential long-term effects of changes in the nutrition environment on health and disease. For ethical and practical reasons it is unlikely that experimental studies in humans to examine these issues could ever be carried out. The circumstances of the Dutch famine, with civilian starvation caused by conditions of war, provide a rare opportunity however to look at the impact of dramatic changes in nutritional exposures that are not normally seen in human populations. A10 -
Comparing Immigrants across the Americas: Migration, Integration and Economic Development Session abstract: Show Session abstract: Hide
Since colonial times the Anglo-Saxon and Latin countries of the Americas have been a potent magnet for migrants around the world. With different chronologies and experiences migrants from Europe and Asia migrated to the Americas, settled in different ways and worked and lived there contributing to the shape of society, institutions and economic development of the North and South American continents. Organizers: • - The Rationality of Argentine Immigration Policy during the Age of Mass Migration Paper summary: Show Paper summary: Hide This paper explores some possible explanations of why pro-immigration policy was a strong and persistence long-run force in Argentina during the age of mass migration. In contrast with the United States, Argentina remained a country open to mass migration until the 1930s (even accounting for some mild restrictions passed before and after World War One). The paper presents a new immigration policy index for Argentina in order to test different hypotheses explaining the reasons to restrict mass immigration. The quantitative evidence presented here suggests that Argentina had two main reasons to restrict immigration prior to the 1930s: quantity of immigrants and increasing inequality. However, immigration policy proved extremely difficult to change for political and institutional reasons. Political economy show how those more hurt by massive immigration could not influence policy. Benefits of immigration were concentrated and policy makers were dominated by pro-immigration interest while costs were diffused. • Simone A. Wegge - Uncommon Destinies: 19th Century Hessians Who Emigrated to the Southern Hemisphere Paper summary: Show Paper summary: Hide
Along with British and Irish emigrants, German emigrants were one of the largest groups to leave Europe in the mid-nineteenth century. The vast majority of these northern Europeans went to the United States. From a dataset on 50,000 different Hessians from the principality of Hesse-Cassel, this paper examines the 11% of this emigrant group, almost 6,000, who did not settle in the U.S. and instead left for South America, Australia, and other European countries. A handful in this subset chose to begin new lives in Asia and Africa. Participants: • James Foreman-Peck - Immigrant entrepreneurial cultures in the twentieth century United States This paper uses US census immigrant data from 1910 and 2000 to show that some national cultures in the twentieth century were more conducive than others to entrepreneurship. It demonstrates that a number of entrepreneurial cultures persisted over the century while others did not. Persistence at first sight suggests culture can contribute to explaining long term economic performance. But cross-country comparison indicates that a strong entrepreneurial culture is not sufficient for high GDP per capita. Without the right institutions such a culture appears at best ineffective, judging by the comparatively strong economic development of nations with low entrepreneurship culture indices. • Carina Frid - Social networks, dark networks: Italian immigration and illegal business in Argentina (1890-1940) Paper summary: Show Paper summary: Hide
This paper points to the discussion of international migration and development of illegal economies along the period of massive migration and economic growth in Argentina (1890-1930). Nexus between crime and immigration from Southern Italy spreaded in many receiving countries in the Americas in the first decades of the 1900’s. In the early XXth. Century, immigrants from Calabria, Basilicata and Sicily reached Argentina’s ports (Buenos Aires, Rosario), where they competed with their Northern fellow citizens in gaining ground both, in urban labour markets (public services construction, ship loading, manufacture), and in economic sectors such as building, food and banking. Criminal practices (blackmailing, kidnapping) and illegal business (gambling, prostitution) developed within large networks of Italians who emigrated from Sicily to Rosario (Argentina’s second largest city) since 1910 to 1940. We aim to discuss why illegal business failed to have control of vast sectors of Argentina’s urban markets during that period of time. • Walter Kamphoefner - Who went South?--Part II: The German Ethnic Niche in South and North America This paper builds upon the work of Herbert Klein and Samuel Baily on Italians, examining the demographic and occupational selectivity of German immigration to South America (primarily Argentina and Brazil), compared to Germans bound for the United States, and the geographic and occupational niches they occupied on the two continents. It draws upon both aggregate and individual-level data from censuses and migration records on three continents to examine occupational profiles, sex ratios, age structure, age heaping as a rough measure of “quality,” urbanization rates, and geographic segregation among Germans on the two continents. • Herbert Klein - Latin American Immigrants in Spain and the United States: A Comparative Analysis
The two nations which have been the recipients of the largest number of Latin American immigrants in the past quarter century, are the United States and Spain. The aim of this paper will be to compare the basic characteristics of these two groups of Latin American born immigrants as seen in two surveys of these populations carried out in 2007. The primary sources for this analysis will be the US Census Bureau’s American Community Survey of 2007, and Spain’s Instituto Nacional de Estadística “Encuesta Nacional de Inmigrantes 2007.” The similarities and differences in the origin, demographic and socio-economic characteristics of these two migration streams is examined as well as the patterns of immigrant integration in the two receiving countries. • Frank Lewis - Capital Constraints and European Migration to Canada: Evidence from the 1920s Passenger Lists The difficulty or inability to borrow made capital market constraints an important part of the decision to move from Europe to North America in the early twentieth century. We formalize the constraint with a life-cycle model, where agents jointly choose the optimal period of saving to finance migration and whether to migrate. Simulations of the model point to the potential role of preferences, the period of adjustment after arrival, and the direct migration costs, in determining who will migrate and at what age; and they help account for the large wage gaps between the Old and New World. Our analysis of the data from the passenger manifests of Dutch arrivals at Canadian ports in 1925, that importantly include the saving of these immigrants, points to the promise of this approach. • Giselle Marin Araya - Immigration to the Panamanian Caribbean as seen through the census from 1911 to 1950 • Marvin McInnis - The Distinctive, Indistinct Canadians in the United States
Abstract • Jeffrey Gale Williamson - About Face! Why Did Latin American Mass Migration Reverse Direction in the 20th Century? During the 450 years between 1492 and 1940, Latin America was a major destination for European and African migrants, coerced and free. The immigrants came in three waves: the first involved small numbers leading Iberian colonization; the second was far bigger and involved black Africans arriving in slave ships; the third involved ‘free’ European labor arriving during the age of mass migration from about 1870 to 1940. – mostly from Iberia and Italy. Currently, Latin America has the highest emigration rate in the world. What explains the spectacular 20th century switch from Latin American immigration 1492-1940 to emigration 1950-2009? • Peng Zhou B10 -
The origin of decisions: numbers, data and statistics in the twentieth century Session abstract: Show Session abstract: Hide
This proposal is in keeping with the general framework of our research program examining “the origin of decisions, public numbers, and private numbers in twentieth-century France”. The objective of this session is to develop and to extend this problematic across western economies more generally. It aims, thereby, to stimulate exchanges and reflections about decision making and numerical data in the industrial world of the twentieth century. The question at hand is to examine both the dynamics and the stakes at play in the construction, use and perception of numbers, or statistics, by actors in the public and private domain. The period of study corresponds with the assertion of state intervention in the economic and social spheres, and of the modernisation of industrial and financial structures. The field covered is very broad in that it extends from the study of institutions producing public or private statistics, to that of the tools themselves, and also to the analysis of the motivation for and the use of these elements by institutional users and their partners. Does the demonstration of national differences and the possible imitation and diffusion mechanisms of statistical production methods, management instruments and accounting techniques point to a convergence in practice? Organizers: • - “« La fiscalité de guerre et ses enseignements, approche comparée entre le monde Anglo-saxon et la France (1913-1924)» sous-titre « La fiscalité, la comptabilité privée et la guerre entre le monde Anglo-saxon et la France (1914-1951) » La comparaison des réactions fiscales de pays Anglo-saxons et de la France aux deux guerres mondiales du XXe siècle et aux périodes de réarmement qui les encadrent vise autant à examiner la façon dont les Autorités politiques et économiques nationales réagissent à des contraintes exceptionnelles qu’à confronter deux « modèles » distincts, ou présentés comme tels, de pratiques privées (entreprises) et publiques (fiscalités). Elle permet de revenir sur une opposition fréquemment avancée du côté français qui distingue, d’une part, l’efficacité fiscale et le développement des comptabilités privées anglo-saxonnes et, d’autre part, les blocages structurels auxquels se heurte l’imposition des bénéfices industriels et commerciaux et la généralisation du principe déclaratif introduit par la loi du 1er juillet 1916 sur la contribution extraordinaire sur les bénéfices de guerre. Même dans les périodes exceptionnelles des guerres, des sorties de guerre et du réarmement, la fiscalité française serait paralysée par une tradition du secret et par le refus des entreprises de se plier à des règles comptables homogènes. L’inorganisation de la profession des comptables priverait le fisc et les producteurs privés des instruments nécessaires au dialogue. Un grand nombre de français déplorent la méfiance générale, qui oppose les contribuables et les agents du fisc, l’inefficacité du contrôle fiscal et l’arbitraire des décisions et vantent les caractéristiques d’un modèle anglo-saxon où la coordination des efforts économiques pour préparer, puis pour financer les conflits bénéficie de la confiance mutuelle existant entre l’Etat et les entreprises. Pour eux, l’antériorité de l’impôt sur le revenu et celle de règles comptables homogènes, appliquées par des professionnels reconnus, constituent les pivots de la collaboration avec le fisc, de l’équité fiscale et du rendement des impôts. Ces clichés correspondent il à une réalité ? Leur diffusion en France est exacerbée par les fortes pressions suscitées par les situations exceptionnelles de conflits. La communication proposée souhaite interroger la réalité de ces clichés. Faisant l’hypothèse que la fiscalité de guerre, qui cristallise les spécificités nationales, peut être retenue comme un bon indicateur des relations entre l’Etat et les entreprises, elle vise, à des échelles géographiques et chronologiques distinctes, à présenter, puis à discuter, ces poncifs en mettant en relief un acteur peu souvent introduit qui est la comptabilité privée et ses professionnels. Elle s’engage ainsi à revisiter deux prototypes originaux d’usage des chiffres en cherchant à comprendre pourquoi, alors qu’il est connu et vanté, le modèle anglo-saxon n’est pas importé en France. La comptabilité privée n’est normalisée qu’en 1942, mais le plan comptable général reste facultatif pour la majorité des entreprises. La profession des experts-comptables ne s’organise qu’à partir de cette date et de façon imparfaite. Comment expliquer ces différences et quels sont leurs effets sur la fiscalité dans l’urgence de la guerre ? • Cheryl S. McWatters - “War taxation and its lessons, a comparative analysis of the Anglo-Saxon and French contexts (1914-1951) ” Sub-title “Taxation, private-sector accounting and the war between the Anglo-Saxon and French worlds (1914-1951)”
The comparison of the fiscal strategies of Anglo-Saxon countries and those of France to the twentieth century’s two world wars and to the periods of rearmament which bracketed them attempts as much to examine the manner in which national political and economic authorities reacted to exceptional pressures as to compare two distinct ‘models’ (or ones presented as such) of private-sector (business) and public (fiscal-policy) techniques. The study provides an opportunity to re-examine a contradiction, frequently advanced on the French side. This contradiction distinguishes, on the one hand, fiscal efficiency and the development of Anglo-Saxon private-sector accounting and, on the other, the structural barriers against which collided the taxation of industrial and commercial profits and the generalisation of the declaratory principle introduced by the Law of 1 July 1916 on the extraordinary taxation of wartime profits. • Philippe Verheyde - Présentation et synthèse d'une première session, Université Paris Dauphine, Paris 5 juin 2009 - Introduction ans synthesis of a first session, Paris 5th june 2009
LA GENESE DE LA DECISION Participants: • Danièle Fraboulet-Rousselier - Metallurgical and Mining Industries Union’s (UIMM) use of economic and social datas (1901-1950) : a strategy
The Metallurgical and Mining Industries Union (UIMM) was established in 1901 in order to defend the interests of a major sector of the French economy and to influence legislation or its application for the benefit of employers. For all along the first half of the twentieth century French government continuously takes an increasing part into lawmaking, which led to change in the employer's attitude. • Sébastien Guex • Irina Mukhina - “International Peddling and Legislative Changes in Post-Soviet Russia”
The economic, social, and political reforms of the former Soviet Union gave rise to a flourishing international peddling trade. Small at first in the later 1980s, by the mid-1990s the shuttle trade expanded to include thirty million people and came to constitute the backbone of Russian consumer trade. Yet ironically, this business remained semi-legal. Presumably, traders legally brought various items in small quantity into Russia. But they claimed illegally that these items were not for resale but for personal use and consistently failed to pay customs duties and income taxes. • Janick Marina Schaufelbuehl - Les vertus de l'ignorance. Enjeux et conflits autour des statistiques sociales et économiques en Suisse au XXe siècle; The Virtues of Ignorance. Implications and Conflicts Concerning Social and Economic Statistics in Switzerland during the 20th Century
En Suisse, l'élaboration de statistiques économiques et sociales de qualité est restée tout au long du XXe siècle particulièrement pauvre et lacunaire lorsque celles-ci représentent un enjeu de pouvoir entre les différents acteurs sociaux et politiques (répartition sociale des richesses, mouvement des capitaux, pour ne prendre que ces exemples). Dans le même sens, l'accès public à de telles données quantitatives demeure spécialement limité. Cette contribution vise, d'une part, à illustrer par quelques cas cette situation très insatisfaisante du point de vue du débat démocratique et de la recherche scientifique et, d'autre part, à en déterminer les différents facteurs explicatifs. C10 -
Hotel Industry in a Long Historical Perspective: Forms, Governance and Actors (18th-21th centuries) Session abstract: Show Session abstract: Hide
Although there is a clear trend in economic history to focus on transnational and transsectorial issues, we are convinced that the organisation of a session on the history of the hotel industry will provide a better understanding of an economic sector which, apart from commemoration’s books and some monographs, remains neglected by historians. The recent interest for the history of tourism and travel - particularly the past world economic congresses (Louvain, Buenos Aires, Helsinki) - emphasized the fact that the hotel industry was central to the development of tourism and travel from the 18th to the 21th centuries. It was, however, also observed that it was part of a more global socio-technical system, which was mainly based on transport and recreation. Organizers: • - Hotel Industry in a Long Historical Perspective: Forms, Governance and Actors (18th-21st centuries). • Margarita Dritsas - Tourism Development in Greece. Entrepreneurial and Financial Strategies in Historical Perspective The paper includes a brief outline of modern tourism development in Greece from the 19th to the 21st century. It focuses on the hospitality industry in terms of types of firms, governance patterns and state policies. Along with entrepreneurial initiatives and institutional framework, financing and credit arrangements are considered an important parameter of tourism development. Details are given about special institutions and policies, both public and private during the interwar years and more so during the post Second World War period. Information is based on new archival sources and material. Participants: • Patrizia Battilani - Hotel industry in 20th century Italy Paper summary: Show Paper summary: Hide
The paper deal with the evolution and the standing out features of the hotel industry in 20th century Italy. There can be little doubt that the most dynamic component of the Italian economy during the years following the Second World War was represented by the nation’s small and medium-sized companies, in both the manufacturing and service sectors. The hotel sector was no exception to this rule; in fact, the most competitive element has always been that of the small, family-run hotels. • Xavier Breuil - Banking archives as a source of history of the hotel industry in the 20th century: the example of Société Générale funds Paper summary: Show Paper summary: Hide
Banks have always had an important role in the hotel trade. Different hotel infrastructures, from small provincial B&Bs to the large palaces in spa towns and tourist cities, have turned to banks to finance their activity and their development. In addition, the development of leisure consumption has encouraged financial institutions to create their own specialised subsidiaries targeting this sector of activity, or even to take stakes in hotel groups. • Tomi Brezovec - Build and they will come: Impact of hotel construction on tourism development in Portoroz, Slovenia Paper summary: Show Paper summary: Hide This paper addresses the impact of hotel construction on tourism demand and market segmentation in Portorož, an Adriatic coastal resort in Slovenia. It discusses the correlation of type and volume of accommodation facilities, and tourism development since late 19th century when first tourists visited Portoroz. The research shows that the impact of accommodation availability on tourism development changes in time. It suggests that the provision of adequate variety and volume of accommodation is more important during the early stages of tourism development, while further development of tourism destination requires focus on the quality of services, accessibility and development of complementary services. The analysis also suggests that destination managers can use accommodation mix as a tool for tourim destination repositionning on the tourism market. • Carlos Damas - The Economic impact of the Spanish Civil War and World War II in the Portuguese hotel industry (1936-1945). A case study: Hotel Tivoli Lisboa
This paper tries to supply a way to estimate the economic impact of the Spanish Civil War and the II World War in the Portuguese hotel establishments. • Cedric Humair - The hotel industry and its importance in the technical and economic development of a region: the Lake Geneva case (1852-1914)
The historiography dedicated to tourism has emphasized how some socio-economic evolutions such as urbanization, mechanization of transport or the advent of leisure time in society have supported pleasure trips and therefore the development of the hotel industry. On the contrary, the research has too often neglected or at least minimized the impact of the hotel sector on a region development. This contribution seeks to fill this gap by analyzing the Geneva Lake region, one of the most important birthplaces of the European tourism. In this space not much touched by the 1st industrial revolution, the hotel business has in fact played the role of an economic motor, stimulating investments and employments. This dynamism provoked a domino effect on several other sectors of the economy. • Virginie Jourdain - Hotel trade’s geography in Brussels - 1880-1940. From palace to boarding house: permanence and evolution in a hotel capital Paper summary: Show Paper summary: Hide For several decades, geographers have written interesting articles about geographical repartition of hotel industry in the urban landscape. They have made maps about their localisation in big cities and have tried to define some explanations on urban hotel trade development. This spatial and cartographic approach has yet rarely been used by historians. This communication’s purpose is precisely to develop this interdisciplinary perspective: using geographer’s methods to study and to analyze dynamic evolution of geographical hotel’s repartition in Brussels since 1880 until the eve of Second World War. In order to exceed the lack of official and reliable data about this subject during the chosen period, we have recourse to Brussels commercial almanacs. However their content isn’t surely exhaustive, nor free from errors, this almanacs make it possible for the researcher to index a broad range of establishments, from luxurious palaces to small boarding houses managed by widows. Thanks to other multiple sources (taxes and population registers, guides, censuses, police archives…), this maps’results (approximately 1900 listed establishments) inform historians about Brussels hotel industries’ localisation and evolution, the early specialisation of some of its districts, their attractiveness or the progressive disaffection of foreigners and Belgian travellers for some parts of the town. More than “simply” creating several maps, this communication wants to draw up the different profiles of hotel-keepers and their customers in the different hotel districts of Brussels, the most important political, economical and cultural city of Belgium at that time. • María Antonia López-Burgos • Evelyne Lüthi-Graf - Historical records management and research : the example of the Swiss Hotel Archives Paper summary: Show Paper summary: Hide
Originally, any serious scientific publication, whatever its subject matter, entails endless hours of archival documents research which often looks more like the quest for the Holy Grail than like a leisure cruise… • Katerina Papadoulaki - Travel agents and hoteliers in Greece; Collateral and competitive relations in the business intercourse during the 20th century Paper summary: Show Paper summary: Hide
The paper will be based on my on-going PhD research in the economic history of Tourism. An attempt will be made to shed light on the emergence of a tourism entrepreneurial identity, arising within the framweork of more general developments of the Greek tourism industry. The period considered spans the last quarter of the 19th and most part of the 20th century. • Stéphanie Quériat - “Just like home”. The tourist hotel industry in the Belgian Ardennes between 1850 and 1914 : a family comfort for Belgian middle-class clients. Paper summary: Show Paper summary: Hide
This paper draws the outlines of the evolution of the tourist hotel industry in the Belgian Ardennes between 1850 and 1914. This work is part of a Ph.D. research currently led on the tourist development – I use in fact the french expression “mise en tourisme” – of this region during the same period and is based on documents such as travel books and tourist guides, public and private archives, professional press and iconography such as postcards. • Alexandre Tessier - The parisian great hotel trade during the Belle Epoque : from a friendly understanding to a fierce rivalry Paper summary: Show Paper summary: Hide In Paris, during the Belle Époque, that’s saying a good deal that the industry of the great hotel trade knows an important growth. We don’t want to relate in its intirety one of the most important chapter of the history of the french hotel trade. But, with the help of some examples, we will try to show the consequences of this development on the old generation of hotels, to prove the forms of this development and then to demonstrate the relations between the actors of the parisian hotel industry during this fundamental age. D10 -
Apprenticeship, Human Capital and the Social Order in the Pre-Industrial world Session abstract: Show Session abstract: Hide
Traditional research on apprenticeship related early modern apprenticeship to corporative and patriarchal ideals. Apprenticeship was seen as part of the life-cycle within a rigid social order. Apprentices lived within their masters’ households; as they trained, they were also socialized into the craft and guild. Organizers: • - Apprenticeship and skill in eighteenth century England Apprenticeship was one of the main ways in which skills and human capital were generated in pre-modern economies. Underpinning the functioning of apprenticeship was a training market that matched (mostly male) youths with masters who had the capacity to provide training. For apprenticeship to operate effectively, arrangements must have provided both parties with an incentive to invest in a long-term relationship. On paper, the operation of the recruitment market was highly regulated and contracts were enforced through a variety of formal and informal institutions. In England, the formal rules of the game were broadly stable over the eighteenth century. Yet in practice, the character and importance of apprenticeship appears to have changed substantially in this period. The roots of these developments in the decline of guild controls over the economy are better understood than their implications for the operation of apprenticeship. This paper discusses some aspects of the transformation of guild apprenticeship in London during the century running up to industrialisation. In particular it looks at what premiums can tell us about the structure of the apprenticeship training market, and at the relationship between apprenticeship, the family and the labour market. • Bert De Munck - How learning worked. Early modern apprenticeship and the commercialization of technical knowledge among the gold and silversmiths in Antwerp
In this paper we would like to examine the circulation of technical knowledge through the lens of apprenticeship. Traditionally, early modern apprenticeship was seen as a backward system of learning in terms of economic efficiency. From the perspective of the guilds, this pessimistic point of view has recently been qualified. Guilds and their regulations vis-à-vis apprenticeship (a fixed term to serve, an obligatory master piece, entry fees etc.) are seen now as having stimulated investment in training and favored technological innovation. According to Epstein (1998) guilds enabled masters to recover the cost of training by paying wages below the marginal product of labour while stimulating apprentices to train by means of bonds and end-term rewards. As to England Jane Humphries has pointed to enforcement mechanisms at a national scale, reducing the threat of hold-up and thus stimulating parties to conclude contracts. Although these theories are hard to corroborate empirically, they are bound to simulate further research and rethink apprenticeship as a regulatory mechanism. However, as a practice apprenticeship is still considered as having been intimately tied up with upbringing and socialization. Research based on apprentice contracts tends to stress not only the patriarchal authority of the father (which might be considered from the perspective of contract enforcing as well, cf. Epstein), but also the disciplining aspects of learning at the shop floor. Moreover, learning is not seen as a process separate from working. Apprentices were not only immersed in practice at the shop floor but they are thought to have been set to a wide variety of household chores as well. And in case learning is seen as more or less separate from working – apprentices first learning and subsequently working in order to settle their debt with their master – the skills transmitted are considered ‘transferable skills’ – applicable in a limited number of firms, for example within a specific craft guild – thus excluding not only general skills but specific and specialized skills as well. Participants: • Clare Crowston • Raoul De Kerf - Shopping for skills. Early modern apprenticeship and the circulation of knowledge among the gold and silversmiths in Antwerp Paper summary: Show Paper summary: Hide In the past, early modern apprenticeship was usually seen as a backward system in terms of economic efficiency. This pessimistic point of view has recently been criticised, but even than learning and working are still being considered as unseparable activities, while the actual skills transmitted are considered as 'transferable skills'. This paper however will stress 1) that learning and upbringing were separable and 2) that training was not necessarily limited to transferable skills. Based on a sample of some 200 apprentice contracts from the gold and silversmiths in early modern Antwerp (and about 20 juridical proceeding on breach of contract?), it will be shown that at least in the seventeenth and the eighteenth century apprentice contracts could be very businesslike agreements geared to the transmission of very specific skills. Depending on the background of the apprentice and the master, the contracts cold vary considerably in terms of the length of the term, the fees due, etc. Default clauses moreover suggest that learning and working were separated in time and that learning up to a certain degree was considered a specific activity. What is more, not all apprentices were bound to a master who acted in loco parentis. A considerable part of them did not board with their master, and even those who did protested carrying out simple preparatory jobs or household chores. In short, learning as it was agreed on in apprentice contracts, should in future research perhaps be seen as a particular economic activity. • Katrina Honeyman - off the parish? Gender, training and work in early industrial England
• Jane Humphries - Rent-seeking or skill-creating? Apprenticeship in early industrial Britain
Apprenticeship has long been contentious. Did it bar entry to trades and so secure monopoly rents as Adam Smith contended, or did it contribute positively to the growth and performance of the early modern and early industrial economy as some modern economic historians have dared to suggest? The rehabilitation of apprenticeship involves specifying the ways in which it contributed to growth and efficiency. Possible channels include training, mobility, and lifelines to the socially excluded. It also requires defending the institution from charges that it was exclusive and anti-meritocratic, time spent in indentures serving only to limit the supply of specific skills. This paper investigates the case for and against apprenticeship in the context of eighteenth and nineteenth-century Britain, a context, which provides something of a natural experiment since the repeal of the Statute of Artificers and the decay of the guilds enables the comparison of regulatory regimes. In the early 18th-century both the law and the power of the guilds supported apprenticeship. By the 19th -century both had disappeared. Apprenticeship no longer conferred an exclusive (albeit irregularly and incompletely policed) right to practice a trade. Comparison of the popularity and perception of apprenticeship in the two periods alongside more general information about the operation and distribution of apprenticeships provides a means to evaluate this intriguing institution. The investigation makes use of a large body of material extracted from working-class memoirs of the period presented in detail in Humphries (2009). It uses both quantitative and qualitative evidence to begin to answer these research questions. • Joern Janssen - ‘Bringing up’ in the Transformation of Wage Labour in England 1349-1563: the Evidence of Labour Statutes
“Apprenticeship … in the Pre-Industrial World” was special under the ‘Statute of Artificers’, that is under English Central Government legislation. From the Black Death in 1349 to 5 Elizabeth I in 1563 labour statutes regulated wage labour independent from the institution of ‘apprenticeship’, which remained exclusive under the government of chartered company ordinances. By contrast, from 1563 to 1814 apprenticeship in England was universal under a statutory framework, but highly diverse. This paper distinguishes two main historically diverse organisations of the labour (and related production) processes under royal charter on the one hand and under statutory law on the other. Each was associated with its related form of reproduction, by ‘apprenticeship’ or ‘bringing up’, coexisting side by side between 1349 and 1563 and under a common framework between 1563 band 1814. The argument is that the English industry developed with bringing up wage labour by ‘degrees’ whilst apprenticeship became obsolete. I suggest that the integration of contradictory forms of the labour process and their related forms of reproduction under the same framework accelerated the disintegration of production under urban charters instead of extending the outdated model of apprenticeship into the territory of wage labour relations. But this is the subject of another study. • Steve Kaplan - Where and Why apprenticeship in Enlightenment France • Chris Minns • Gilles Postel-Vinay • Merja Uotila - Artisan Apprenticeship without Guilds in the Early-Nineteenth-Century Rural Environment
The research on handicrafts in general has concentrated on study of urban artisans and guilds. However, at the beginning of the nineteenth century, not all artisans operated in towns nor did rural artisans always constitute small marginal groups. For instance, the majority of Finnish artisans, like the majority of the Finnish population, lived and worked in the countryside, and operated within a different institutional structure than urban artisans. I argue that studying rural apprentices offers a different perspective and widens our understanding of apprenticeship: town guilds alone do not explain the rather complex apprenticeship structures of early modern societies. E10 -
Market Integration and Price volatility from antiquity to the present. Session abstract: Show Session abstract: Hide
That the efficiency of the market can be measured by the volatility of commodity prices has been eloquently defended by KG Persson in his Grain markets in Europe 1500 – 1900. Usually the debate on this question is centered on price data from late medieval to modern history. Since some decades a growing number of price data has become available from a much older period, viz. from first millennium BC Babylonia. Currently a research project has started at the VU University in Amsterdam with the purpose to investigate these price data and test the value of price-and-market theories for this period (485 – 61 BC). See the data here:(http://www.iisg.nl/hpw/babylon.php). This research nicely fits in Michael Jursa's project in Vienna on the economy of Babylonia in the 7th – 5th century BC. This research especially focuses on the economy of the temples which owned large landed estates which they cultivated with an eye on market. Some temples specialized in grain, others in dates, others in wool. One topic deserves special interest: the mutual influence of prices in economies with a basically two staple diet: grain and dates in Mesopotamia, grain and potatoes in Europe, or perhaps rice and grain in other societies. As regards the modern period Roman Studer will discuss the long-term patterns of market integration all over Europe, from about 1700 to 1900. David Jacks' will contribute on volatility and economic growth and commodity price volatility from 1720 up to the present day in development economics. Organizer: • - Market integration and price volatility of barley and dates in Hellenistic Babylonia (third to first century BC).
The present session stems from a research programme carried out at the Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, “On the efficiency of markets for agricultural products in pre-industrial societies: The case of Babylonia c. 400 – c. 60 BC.” Participants: • Victoria Bateman - The evolution of markets in early modern Europe, 1350-1800: a study of wheat prices Paper summary: Show Paper summary: Hide Using a compilation of monthly and annual wheat price data, this paper examines the trend of market development in Europe from the late-Medieval period to the Industrial Revolution. In contrast to much of the existing work which suggests that markets generally improved during this time, the findings propose that markets were on average as well integrated in Europe in the fifteenth century as in the late eighteenth century. In between these two times, markets are found to have suffered a severe contraction. As will be seen, these findings enable us to build a more complete picture of markets in history, and also provides a significant challenge to our current thoughts on economic growth. • Péter Földvári - Agricultural structure and price volatility: the case of Babylon
Analyzing several aspects of price behavior in Babylon, Temin (2002) concludes that over-all there is enough evidence to conclude that the prices in Ancient Babylon were affected by market mechanisms. This is in contrast with most evidence from coefficients of variation that show a clear reduction of volatility over time between 300 BC to 1900 AD. Since declining volatility is often equated with increase in market-mechanisms, this implies that there must be other factors at work. • Joost Huijs - Foodstuff Quality and Price Volatility from a Nutritional point of view: about Calories & Subsistence Levels in Parthian Babylon Paper summary: Show Paper summary: Hide
As a rule, products regarded as superior tend to exhibit a lower volatility in prices than inferior ones. This is interesting knowledge for cases in which we want to explain differences in price volatility in an economy. In this paper, I will try to determine the superiority/inferiority of five basic foodstuffs from an ancient society: Parthian Babylonia in the timespan 141-61 BC, from which we possess an amount of price data unusually big for Antiquity, recorded in the so-called Astronomical Diaries. I will do this by assessing the nutritional value of barley, dates, cress, cuscuta/mustard and sesame; and compare them with the corresponding price volatilities. The fact that the nutritional value of barley and dates has been assessed before, will be of great help. • Michael Jursa - Prices and Wages in Babylonia in the Sixth Century BC: the Impact of Monetization and Structural Change in Agriculture on a Complex Agrarian Economy This paper explores some implications of price and wage data from sixth-century BC Babylonia. Price series can be established for barley and dates, as well as for other agricultural products such as wool and sesame and for slaves, sheep and land. The price data can also be correlated with wage data, for which however the documentation is less abundant. This material has to be analysed against the background of the distinctive features of the Babylonian economy of this period. Foremost among these one should mention the comparatively far-reaching monetization of economic exchange, from which fact alone the relevance of the price data for an analysis of the economy as a whole can be deduced – in fact we are dealing with the earliest body of price data coming from the region for which this claim can justifiably be made. Second, it can be shown that as an agrarian economy, the Babylonian economy was based, not on one leading crop, but on two, dates and barley. They were of potentially equal importance for nutrition, but their cultivation had fundamentally different agrarian, social and economic implications. Further features which distinguish the Babylonian economy of this period from other economic systems of Antiquity include the ubiquitous availability of cheap water transport and the presence of a well-developed system of legal and commercial institutions (guaranteed by the state): both features which can be expected to have reduced transaction costs. The paper will suggest a reading of the price data which is informed by these background conditions, addressing also the question of market integration, price volatility, standards of living and the potential of the Babylonian economy to achieve phases of intensive economic growth. • Daan Marks - Unity or Diversity? On the integration and efficiency of rice markets in Indonesia, c. 1920-2006 Paper summary: Show Paper summary: Hide The emergence of an integrated national economy in Indonesia has been a slow and on-going evolutionary process. Using rice price series for a number of cities across the Indonesian archipelago, this paper provides quantitative evidence to support this notion. It shows that during Indonesia’s colonial period markets were relatively well integrated and functioned efficiently. However, the Second World War and the subsequent struggle for independence resulted in disintegrated and inefficient markets. Only since the late 1970s markets in Indonesia returned to a situation that we can speak about a national integrated economy with well-functioning markets. • Bas van Leeuwen - The structural analysis of Babylonian price data: a partial equilibrium approach
Although the available Babylonian price series have been analyzed in several studies, most of them relied heavily on different statistical methods (mostly descriptive statistics or smoothing and trend fitting). The main exponent of this is Slotsky (1997) whose work is further criticized for not taking proper care of the historical background (Van der Spek and Mandemakers 2003) and contains basically no economic analysis. G10 -
Do EU accession and membership help to overcome economic backwardness? Session abstract: Show Session abstract: Hide
This session aims to compare “latecomers” and “late latecomers” in the process of European integration, i.e. two groups of relatively less developed countries which joined the European Communities in the 1970s-1980s (Ireland, Greece, Portugal, and Spain) and in 2004/2007. In all these cases, accession was part of a long-term process of integration and adjustment, stretching for several decades and affecting the economic structures and performances of the concerned countries in a profound way. Accession and EU membership were perceived both as a well-deserved recognition of the affiliation to the European club, and as a chance to speed-up economic growth and to overcome economic backwardness. The negotiations for accession stimulated institutional efforts attempting to prepare economies and societies for EU membership, and influenced in many ways the process of economic development. After accession, the impact of EU membership was even more significant and pervasive. Yet, the performance of the various accession countries varied a lot, and in some cases it was even divergent (e.g. compare the Irish break-through with the Portuguese below-average growth of the last years). The organizers of the session expect to bring together papers that would look either on the specific cases (countries), or will try to investigate comparatively the impact of factors like the development of human capital, investment rates or the transfer of structural funds, with the overall goal to answer how the long-term process of accession affected the institutional setting, the growth patterns, and the economic structures of the countries concerned. Organizers: • - Concluding Comments. The Post-Accession Performance of Ireland, Greece, Spain and Portugal and its teachings for the East European new members of the European Union. Paper summary: Show Paper summary: Hide Besides comments on the presented papers, my intervention will include a discussion of the diverse post-accession catching-up performance of the countries which were relatively underdeveloped when they became European Community members in the 1970s and 1980s. Taking advantage of the longer time-span of their experience as EU-members, I will assess both their overall performance measured in GDP/capita and the factors which allowed them to speed-up the catching-up process or, on the contrary, made them lag behind the EU-average. • Jacek Kochanowicz Participants: • Fernando Guirao - An analysis of the trade-liberalisation impact of the EEC-Spanish bilateral agreement of June 1970 previous to accession negotiations Paper summary: Show Paper summary: Hide
Most Community expansions had been preceded by previous adaptation of the acceding country to avoid too severe competition when entering into the Community’s customs union. Some countries used for that specific purpose the formula of increasing foreign competition via special international free-trade arrangements, previous to EEC membership. That was the case of Denmark and Portugal with more than 12 and 25 years (respectively) of membership in the EFTA previous to EEC membership, or the case of the Republic of Ireland which, excluded from EFTA and EEC memberships, signed an industrial free-trade arrangement with the United Kingdom in order to force on itself the progressive adaptation to a more open economic scenario. In the case of Greece, it was the Community itself that helped that country to sustain the transition to a more open economy which Community membership imposed. This was the main function of the 1962 Treaty of Association with the EEC. The accession of Austria, Finland and Sweden did not require any previous economic adaptation, since the three economies were active members of the European Economic Space which extended to them the regulations and rewards of the Single European Market. Even the accession of former Eastern European countries in 2004 and 2007 was preceded by a deep transformation of their economies to meet the strict economic criteria established in the Copenhagen European Council summit of June 1993. In sum, most of the countries that negotiated accession into the European Community had required previous adaptation and transition of their domestic economies to the circumstances of increased competition in the Community’s customs union. In the case of Spain, the bilateral trade agreement that was signed in July 1970 between the EEC and Spain, which governed bilateral relations until Spain’s membership in 1986 and which might be considered as similar to an Association agreement, was the institutional device specifically designed to bring Spain into the common market. • Niamh Hardiman - Shaping Ireland's Productive Capacity: Bringing Politics Back Into Varieties of Capitalism Ireland's economic trajectory since 1960 sets it apart from other small European countries. EU membership in 1973 provided the conditions for a transformation of productive capacity. But domestic policy choices merit closer analysis. Unlike the Mediterranean periphery on the one hand, or Scandinavian countries on the other, a strong prior commitment to export-led growth and inward FDI conditioned later policy choices. The institutional framework underlying state commitment to a distinctive profile of investment in education and skills training is explored further here. • Pedro Lains • Viorel Constantin Mihai - Higher Education and Catching up. A Comparative Study of Ireland, Portugal, Poland and Romania During the late 20th century and early 21st century the world is heading towards a knowledge-based economy. Higher education investment plays an essential role in society, creating new knowledge, transferring it to students and fostering innovation. The products of higher education graduates, new knowledge and breakthrough research all fuel prospering economies. It is an essential element of an attractive and prospering community, an excellent foundation upon which to build. The European Commission is helping member states and applicant and neighboring countries in their higher education modernizing efforts through policy initiatives, discussion papers and forums, as well as through EU programs. In my paper I will address the question of the relationship between the evolution of higher education and the economic performance of some new members of the EU, namely Ireland, Portugal, Poland and Romania. The first question regards whether there is a correlation between overall economic performance (GDP/capita growth in relation with EU average) and various indicators of the development of Higher Education (% of GDP invested in HE; EUR/student; % of graduates in overall population etc.). The second issue is whether the economic performance depends more on quantitative indicators of HE or on qualitative (institutional) improvements in the system of HE. The comparative analysis is focussed on the key trends and mechanisms identified in the development of higher education and the economic catching up process in each of the four countries during their pre and post EU admission period. • Erik Reinert - European Eastern Enlargement as Europe’s Attempted Economic Suicide? We argue that the process of European economic integration has made a qualitative shift: from a Listian symmetrical economic integration to an integrative and asymmetrical integration. This shift started in the early 1990s with the integration of the former Soviet economies into the economies of Europe and the world as a whole, reached its climax with the Eastern enlargement of the Union in 2004, and now forms the foundation of the renewed Lisbon Strategy. This change is measurably threatening European welfare: the economic periphery in the first instance, and potentially the core countries as well. Two parallel processes aggravate this development: the timing of the enlargement at this particular phase of the evolving techno-economic paradigm; and the creation of the European Monetary Union along the so-called Maastricht route towards convergence and fiscal stability. H10 -
The Rise of an Islamic order: Money, Trade and Manufacturing in the Islamic Empire 700-1500. Session abstract: Show Session abstract: Hide
The economic history of early medieval Islam remains unfamiliar terrain for European economic historians in spite of its immediate relevance to the issues they study. Not all of this is sheer disinterest: unfamiliarity with the languages and the paucity of archival material also contribute to a historiography of Islamic economic history which is plagued by sweeping generalizations and widespread inconsistencies. Nonetheless, the Islamic economic structures such as land tenure and money, or economic institutions such as trade organization and property rights offer a comparative context for the study of present day global economic institutions and performance, while recent studies show that they have also influenced them directly. For the Islamic world, the early first cycle of economic resurgence, which came to an end by the eleventh century provided the economic institutions and infrastructures which generated and influenced future developments. By the time the process was completed, the centralised economy of Baghdad and the Empire was forced to give way to a new system of prospering regional economies and a shift to a Mediterranean trading zone. Organizers: • - Measuring Economic Growth in the Islamic Caliphate, 650-1000 Paper summary: Show Paper summary: Hide
Measuring Economic Growth in the Islamic Caliphate, 650-1000. • Gladys Frantz-Murphy Participants: • Stuart Borsch - The Black Death in Egypt and England
ABSTRACT • Michele Campopiano - Tax Administration, Political Centralization and Balance of Social Forces in Late Sasanian and Early Islamic Iraq (Sixth-Ninth centuries) Paper summary: Show Paper summary: Hide The administration of the Early Islamic Caliphate was largely based on the institutions and the administrative structure of the political entities that controlled the Near East before the Arab conquest. Prior to this conquest, Iraq was subject to the authority of the Sasanian dynasty. The continuity between the institutional framework of the Sasanian Empire and that of the Islamic Caliphate is sometimes striking, but remarkable changes occurred as well. In order to understand the process of continuity and change in State administration we must analyse the evolution of the institutional framework in connection with the economic, social and even ecological challenges faced by the Middle Eastern Empires. Land tax administration is a very important example of how such factors were interconnected. Both the Sasanian Empire and the Islamic Caliphate relied heavily on land tax income. At the beginning of the sixth century, the Sasanian Emperors were able to implement an important tax reform, which introduced a tax assessment based on a fixed amount of money or crops per surface unit and led to an increasingly centralized tax administration. This system aimed to create a stable financial basis for a government that was involved in continuous wars. The Islamic Caliphate based its land tax on a similar system, but step by step several innovations were introduced, as a result of different factors, such as deteriorated water management, pressure from elites, growing urban population. • Ersilia Francesca - Merchants and Money: Formal and Informal Credit Networks as Alternative Basis for Interest in Medieval Islam
Utilizing historical as well juridical sources, this paper will focus on two questions: how Medieval Islam understood the Quranic prohibition of usury and how this prohibition influenced the practice of commerce. I’ll argue that the Islamic jurisprudence reacted to the law of usury developing legal instruments necessary for the extensive use of mercantile credit which was crucial in the rise of Medieval Islamic commerce and entrepreneurship. The shortage of cash together with the risks of transporting large sums of money across perilous routes also contributed in the growth of a sophisticated system of credit instruments. • Michael G. Morony - The Commercialization of the Economy in the Early Islamic Period Commercialization is seen as a process that in- volves increased economic exchange based on specialized production. It is argued that in the early Islamic period this included a change in the nature of commercial agency, the commercializa-tion of agriculture, public bathing, and the annual housing markets at Makka and Madina, the involve- ment of merchants in mining, and the development of a slave trade. The causes of commercialization are argued to have included the fact that the early Islamic empire was created and ruled by people with a merchant background or who were involved in commerce as government officials, the lack of restrictiions on commerce and on who could engage in it, the stimulation of commerce by a monetized economy, the development of credit instruments, tax breaks, and the annual hajj, and the facilitation of commerce by merchant networks provided by religious communities. The two main hypotheses are (1) a change from government control of commerce to government facilitatiion of commerce from the sixth to the eighth century C.E and (2) a change during the seventh century from government distribution of necessities to the commercial provision of commodities by merchants through market exchange. • Maria Merce Viladrich y Grau - Some aspects of the early fiscal Umayyad organization in the North-east of the Iberian Peninsula: the contribution of the Oriental sources
The territory of the modern Catalonia was submitted by the Umayyad army during a brief period of time, from the penetration of al-Hurr (717-718) up to the stabilization of the Carolingian frontier by Charlemagne in 810. We want to call the attention on the fact that the early Catalan private documentation contains allusions to the payment of a tax called "tasca”. I10 -
The Historical Determinants of Entrepreneurship, 1800-2000 Session abstract: Show Session abstract: Hide
Since Joseph A. Schumpeter (1911) is widely accepted that entrepreneurship is a key factor in economic development. However, the research on the empirical aspects of entrepreneurship is very recent. Organizers: • - Education and Entrepreneurship in 20th Century Spain: an Overview
Since Joseph A. Schumpter published his "Theorie der wirtschaftlichen Entwicklung" in 1911 an important role in economic development has been assigned to entrepreneurship. Thanks to three large initiatives (the Observatory of European SMEs, belonging to the European Union; the Centre for Entrepreneurship, SMEs and Local Development, belonging to the OECD; and the Global Entrepreneurship Monitor or GEM) and some surveys, such as the Eurobarometer or a very recent one for the World Bank (Klapper et al., 2007), it has been possible to make progress in the last years in dealing scientifically with the concept of the entrepreneurship. These researches have been of interest to governments, particularly those from European countries. Thus, in 2003, the European Commission brought out the "Green Paper on Entrepreneurship in Europe", which based mainly on research by David B. Audretsch (Audretsch et al., 2002), proposed to debate on several initiatives to stimulate entrepreneurship in Europe. • Youssef Cassis • Pierangelo Toninelli - Italian Entrepreneurship: Conjectures and Evidence from a Historical Perspective Paper summary: Show Paper summary: Hide This paper is the first product of an ongoing research on the determinants and the role of entrepreneurship in Italian economic development. Its primary aim is the creation of a data-set of Italian entrepreneurs for the period encompassed between the Unification of the Kingdom (1861) and the end of the XXth century. The main source of the research is a collection of 390 entrepreneurial biographies, prepared for an ongoing Dictionary of Italian Entrepreneurs. The first part of the paper presents a descriptive analysis of the main peculiarities of the country’s entrepreneurship on the basis of a few standard variables traditionally used in economic analysis. The second one refines the descriptive approach through a methodology – Multiple Correspondence Analysis and Cluster Analysis – usual by now in standard statistics, yet not very familiar to scholars in economic and/or business history. This has allowed us to single out a few entrepreneurial typologies of the history of Italian capitalism which partly confirm the “traditional” features already emphasized by historiography; such as the prominence of northern entrepreneurs, the strong relations both with own and partner’s families, the almost total absence of female entrepreneurs and an essentially middle-class rooted entrepreneurship. However a few novel interesting aspects emerge, the most surprising being the good level of formal education of the sample: a neat majority (60%) has a medium/high degree and almost one third an university degree Participants: • Franco Amatori - Entrepreneurial Typologies in the History of Industrial Italy: Reconsiderations
Almost thirty years ago the Business History Review published an essay of mine under the title, “Entrepreneurial Typologies in the History of Industrial Italy”. That paper underlined the differences between a State-oriented entrepreneurship identified with the city of Genoa and the contrasting market-oriented entrepreneurship more commonly associated with the city of Milan. Actually three typologies were outlined: the “private” entrepreneur, the “supported” entrepreneur and the “public” entrepreneur as my work determined that, even with this overwhelming presence of the State, it was possible to single out the concept that we define as entrepreneurship. • Carlos Davila - Entrepreneurship and Cultural Values in Latin America, 1850-2000. From Modernization and Dependency Theory Toward a Business History Perspective Focusing on the historical determinants of entrepreneuship in Latin America, and in particular, the influence of cultural factors, this paper is aimed at an analysis of the eventful path of the literature dealing with the role of values (from "traditional" to "modern") and its relationships to entrepreneurship in Latin America between 1850-2000, and to examining the potential growing business historiography on this region of the world offers to advance its understanding. For this purpose, the papers draws selectively on surveys of the field and explores the challenges and opportunities confronting future research into the historical explanation of entrepreneurship in this part of the world; in particular, its potential for conducting studies of entrepreneurial typologies are also delineated. With this in mind, key features and patterns of Latin American entrepreneurship based upon business history research output are also identified. Within Latin America's broad scope and diversity (the region consists of 21 countries), this paper encompasses Mexico and seven South American nations (Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Perú, Venezuela and Uruguay), with particular emphasis on an Andean country (Colombia). The contents of this paper could prove useful to policy makers fostering entrepreneurship in Latin America, as well as to business schools engaged in needed discussion about the extent to which culture, and in particular values are key in today's concerns to foster entrepreneurship. • Paloma Fernández Pérez - DYNASTIES. A RELATIVELY NEGLECTED DETERMINANT OF ENTREPRENEURSHIP. Recent literature on entrepreneurship stresses the fundamental role played by networks in achieving innovation, competitiveness and internationalization (Cassis and Minoglou 2005). On the other hand, longevity has been claimed by A. Chandler Jr. or Y. Cassis, among others, as an ideal measure of the performance of firms, and thus, of entrepreneurship. And it is precisely longevity and networks the two most important features that characterize successful dynasties. Political scientists and economists have coincided in outlining the otherwise underestimated role of dynasties in the advance of entrepreneurship in both developed and underdeveloped economies (Landes 2006). In order to shed light about the role played by dynasties in the creation of social capital and the accumulation and transfer of entrepreneurship, this paper looks closely at the role played by Catalan dynasties from the late 19th century through the late 20th century. Economic historians have stressed the historical leadership of this region in the Spanish industrialization process. Moreover, hundreds of biographies have revealed the existence of many Schumpeterian innovative entrepreneurs in the region, able to see opportunities and gather resources to establish businesses in a wide variety of economic activities. There is, however, comparatively less work, with a cross sector approach, on the social and institutional dynastic networks that made entrepreneurship such a historically available, and adaptive, resource in this region. Interestingly, in Catalonia a considerable number of Schumpeterian dynasties have managed to transfer entrepreneurship from generation to generation, thus leaving a valuable bequest for the future of the region. Many of these dynasties are indeed leading the internationalization process of many Spanish firms in quite a successful way. In our paper we present advanced results of a research in progress about large family firms in Catalonia. We will place the Catalan dynasties in a theoretical framework that takes into account the social capital of the region as a factor that helped to build the networks through which information, goods and persons have flowed over time. • James Foreman-Peck - Entrepreneurial Culture or Institutions? A Twentieth Century Resolution This paper tests the strength and persistence of cultural influences on entrepreneurship over the best part of a century. Comparison of self-employment propensities of US immigrant groups in 1910 and 2000 suggests a number of stable customary stimuli, deduced from national origins. In accordance with the ‘cultural critique’, the English were less prone to entrepreneurship than other US immigrant groups, once controls for other influences are included. The Dutch were consistently about averagely entrepreneurial, not as precocious as might be expected if the predominant Protestant religion encouraged entrepreneurship. Conversely Weber’s identification of nineteenth century Catholic culture as inimical to economic development is not born out in the twentieth century by the sustained entrepreneurship of Cubans and Italians in the United States. The strongest entrepreneurial cultures were exhibited by those originating from the Middle East, Greece and Turkey, though some historical interpretation is necessary to establish who these people were. The inference from these patterns is that entrepreneurial culture must be of minor significance for economic development compared with institutional influences. • Vipin Gupta - Entrepreneurial India: Reengineering West or Rediscovering Self This paper discusses the approaches and typologies of entrepreneurship in the emerging markets, using the case of India. Theoretical issues around the use of foreign technology vs. traditional knowledge are examined. Then, typologies of entrepreneurship are examined over different phases of history. The discussion is organized chronologically - pre-British era, British colonial era, early independence mixed economy era, and reforms era. The real-world facts assembled, and insights gained are pregnant with meaning for entrepreneurship in the emerging markets. • Ioanna Pepelasis Minoglou - Entrepreneurial Typologies in a Young Nation State: Evidence from the founding charters of Greek Société Anonymes, 1830-1909
This paper examines entrepreneurs(hip) in Greece between National Independence in 1830 and 1909, the year of the ‘peaceful revolution’ of the bourgoisie. Following Foreman-Peck (2005), the formation of new companies is perceived as an outcome of entrepreneurial initiatives. The analysis here is based on an exciting new database constructed from the 251 founding charters of the total population of 303 joint stock company type Société Anonyme start-ups established between 1830 and 1909. This database offers information on the identities and actions of company founders. It also gives a unique opportunity to conceptualise the general contours of entrepreneurs(hip) in the macroscopic context of Greece, a latecomer economy/young nation state. • Ignacio Moral • Gloria Quiroga - NATURE OR NURTURE? FACTORS OF ENTREPRENEURSHIP: A COMPARATIVE APPROACH
Entrepreneurial studies are proliferating and a question which is cropping up often is: what moves entrepreneurs? is it just a matter of genes, or are there more general factors (social, psychological) which move people to become entrepreneurs; and not only this: what makes entrepreneurs successful? What makes some behave in a certain way and others differently? Using a sample of English and Spanish entrepreneurs, the paper tries to show that • John Tang - Entrepreneurship and Japanese Industrialization in Historical Perspective Studies of entrepreneurship in nineteenth century Japan typically focus on the activities of large, family owned conglomerates know as zaibatsu due to the lack of documentation for smaller independent firms. Nevertheless, it may be possible to broaden the scope of analysis by using data drawn from corporate genealogies, which provide a more complete cross-section of entrepreneurial activity. Using these genealogies, I develop a new dataset of firm entry during the Meiji Period (1868-1912) for a wide range of industries, allowing me to analyze aspects of Japan's early industrialization that heretofore have relied on anecdotal or case evidence. I also propose a game-theoretic model of entry appropriate for late developing economies to exploit the qualitative nature of these data. • Gabriel Tortella • Michelangelo Vasta - Italian Entrepreneurship: Conjectures and Evidence from a Historical Perspective This paper is the first product of an ongoing research on the determinants and the role of entrepreneurship in Italian economic development. Its primary aim is the creation of a data-set of Italian entrepreneurs for the period encompassed between the Unification of the Kingdom (1861) and the end of the XXth century. The main source of the research is a collection of 390 entrepreneurial biographies, prepared for an ongoing Dictionary of Italian Entrepreneurs. The first part of the paper presents a descriptive analysis of the main peculiarities of the country’s entrepreneurship on the basis of a few standard variables traditionally used in economic analysis. The second one refines the descriptive approach through a methodology – Multiple Correspondence Analysis and Cluster Analysis – usual by now in standard statistics, yet not very familiar to scholars in economic and/or |