環境, 国家と経済発展 : ヨーロッパとアジアの比較史
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概要
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This paper considers why Europe was the first continent to achieve sustained economic growth. Society's responses were more important than environmental endowments. Culture was not fixed but responsive to exogenous economic change, though capable of reinforcing it. Technological change was less fundamental than the emergence of societies that did not discourage it. Objections that, without technological advance, market growth would have remained 'Smithian'(allocative) are countered by noting that such growth still had ample scope in the eighteenth century. As to politics, the bonding of Europe's political units in a stable way, offering competition and a single market, was highly important. Nevertheless, two modern groups converge on the view that Europe's growth came late and did not depend on internal European circumstances. The 'world historians' see the advance as accidental. The 'quantifiers' see change before 1820 as insignificant. The present paper urges that early Europe's institutions were vital for generating and sustaining growth. Europe's political and legal institutions, although originally intended to promote elite interests, were particularly 'open' and generalisable to other social groups as well as, eventually, to non-Europeans.
- 社会経済史学会の論文
- 2001-07-25
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関連論文
- 環境, 国家と経済発展 : ヨーロッパとアジアの比較史
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- 「歴史制度分析」の挑戦 : 新古典派数量経済史はゆらぐか
- 日本経済史における資源 : 一八〇〇〜一九四〇年
- クリオメトリックスの動向について
- S・B・ハンレー/K・ヤマムラ著, 速水融/穐本洋哉訳, 『前工業化期日本の経済と人口』, ミネルヴァ書房、一九八二年十二月、三二〇頁、二五〇〇円
- タイ輸出工業の発展(経済特集 : 貿易・直接投資と経済発展)