How The West Grew RichBasic Books, 1986 M02 6 - 353 páginas Rosenberg and Birdzell examine how the West--Europe, Canada, and the United States--escaped from poverty into sustained economic growth and material well-being. They present an interpretative study of the economic development of the Western world since the Middle Ages and argue that the political pluralism and flexibility of the West's institutions explain its prosperity and wealth. The authors demonstrate that the break-up of centralized political and religious controls encouraged the expansion of trade and the growth of urban culture, along with the scientific, cultural, and political freedom that was necessary to feed economic and technological innovations. ISBN 0-465-03108-0 : $19.95. |
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Página 221
... shares traded than by those with no control at all . Until the 1890s , the stocks traded on public exchanges in the United States were principally shares of railroads and utilities . The Pullman Palace Car Company was the only ...
... shares traded than by those with no control at all . Until the 1890s , the stocks traded on public exchanges in the United States were principally shares of railroads and utilities . The Pullman Palace Car Company was the only ...
Página 226
... shares had come to be regarded as " very risky securities to hold " as a result of adverse experience with shares of industrial companies bought during the boom of the first half of the 1870s . Common shares also bore the brunt of a ...
... shares had come to be regarded as " very risky securities to hold " as a result of adverse experience with shares of industrial companies bought during the boom of the first half of the 1870s . Common shares also bore the brunt of a ...
Página 227
... shares that were not fully paid disappeared between 1895 , when the average unpaid liability on shares listed in Sir H. Burdett's Official Intelligence ( first issued in 1882 ) was 33.2 percent and 1915 , when it had ceased to exist for ...
... shares that were not fully paid disappeared between 1895 , when the average unpaid liability on shares listed in Sir H. Burdett's Official Intelligence ( first issued in 1882 ) was 33.2 percent and 1915 , when it had ceased to exist for ...
Contenido
The Middle Ages | 37 |
The Growth of Trade to 1750 | 71 |
The Evolution of Institutions Favorable to Commerce | 113 |
Derechos de autor | |
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How The West Grew Rich: The Economic Transformation Of The Industrial World Nathan Rosenberg,L. E., Jr. Birdzell Vista previa limitada - 2008 |
Términos y frases comunes
Adam Smith advances advantage agricultural American artisan authority became capital capital accumulation capitalist charters commercial companies competition corporations costs countries decline early Economic History economic organization economic sphere effect employees England Europe European exchange expansion experiment explanation factory system Fernand Braudel feudal fifteenth century firms guilds hierarchy Ibid important improvements incorporation increase individual Industrial Revolution innovation institutions interest investment investors labor land large numbers less manor manorial system manufacturing Marx medieval merchant class merger Middle Ages military modern monopoly nineteenth century oligopoly organizational output ownership period population power looms production profits Protestantism putting-out system R. H. Tawney revenues rise risk scientific sector shares sixteenth social society steam engine steel supply textile towns trade transportation University Press urban villeins wealth West West's Western economic growth Western economies Western growth workers