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 78
... merchants . Trade and a professional merchant class have never wholly disappeared from Mediterranean and European life since the time of the Phoenicians . All through the Middle Ages , Venice , the cities of Lombardy , the towns of the ...
... merchants . Trade and a professional merchant class have never wholly disappeared from Mediterranean and European life since the time of the Phoenicians . All through the Middle Ages , Venice , the cities of Lombardy , the towns of the ...
Página 99
... merchants ' products are place , time , liquidity , and risk . They buy here and sell there , buy now and sell later . Normally , these intermediary services are of substantial value both to those who sell to merchants and to those who ...
... merchants ' products are place , time , liquidity , and risk . They buy here and sell there , buy now and sell later . Normally , these intermediary services are of substantial value both to those who sell to merchants and to those who ...
Página 117
... merchants began to deposit funds with more widely known merchants , in order to place themselves in a position to pay by bills of exchange drawn on the more widely known merchants . It did not take long for the merchants who accumulated ...
... merchants began to deposit funds with more widely known merchants , in order to place themselves in a position to pay by bills of exchange drawn on the more widely known merchants . It did not take long for the merchants who accumulated ...
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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Otras ediciones - Ver todas
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 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 medieval merchant class merger Middle Ages military modern monopoly Nathan Rosenberg 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 ships sixteenth social society steam engine supply textile towns trade transportation University Press urban villeins wealth West West's Western economic growth Western economies Western growth workers