Prices, wages and fertility in pre-industrial England

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Prices, wages and fertility in pre-industrial England. / Klemp, Marc Patrick Brag.

In: Cliometrica, No. 6, 01.2012, p. 63-77.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Klemp, MPB 2012, 'Prices, wages and fertility in pre-industrial England', Cliometrica, no. 6, pp. 63-77. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11698-011-0072-5

APA

Klemp, M. P. B. (2012). Prices, wages and fertility in pre-industrial England. Cliometrica, (6), 63-77. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11698-011-0072-5

Vancouver

Klemp MPB. Prices, wages and fertility in pre-industrial England. Cliometrica. 2012 Jan;(6):63-77. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11698-011-0072-5

Author

Klemp, Marc Patrick Brag. / Prices, wages and fertility in pre-industrial England. In: Cliometrica. 2012 ; No. 6. pp. 63-77.

Bibtex

@article{e9549cd585544bc0a75eff569dda13d5,
title = "Prices, wages and fertility in pre-industrial England",
abstract = "To shed light on the economic-demographic mechanisms operating in the epoch of pre-industrial economic stagnation, a two-sector Malthusian model is formulated in terms of a cointegrated vector autoregressive model on error correction form. The model allows for both agricultural product wages and relative prices to affect fertility. The model is estimated using new data for the pre-industrial period in England, and the analysis reveals a strong, positive effect of agricultural wages as well as a nonnegative effect of real agricultural prices on fertility. Furthermore, it is demonstrated that there is strongly decreasing returns to scale with respect to labour in the agricultural sector and approximately constant returns to scale in the manufacturing sector. The analysis provides evidence in favour of the usual Malthusian model, as invoked by unified growth theories such as e.g. Galor and Weil (Am Econ Rev 90:806–828, 2000).",
author = "Klemp, {Marc Patrick Brag}",
note = "JEL Classification C32, N3, O1",
year = "2012",
month = jan,
doi = "10.1007/s11698-011-0072-5",
language = "English",
pages = "63--77",
journal = "Cliometrica",
issn = "1863-2505",
publisher = "Springer",
number = "6",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Prices, wages and fertility in pre-industrial England

AU - Klemp, Marc Patrick Brag

N1 - JEL Classification C32, N3, O1

PY - 2012/1

Y1 - 2012/1

N2 - To shed light on the economic-demographic mechanisms operating in the epoch of pre-industrial economic stagnation, a two-sector Malthusian model is formulated in terms of a cointegrated vector autoregressive model on error correction form. The model allows for both agricultural product wages and relative prices to affect fertility. The model is estimated using new data for the pre-industrial period in England, and the analysis reveals a strong, positive effect of agricultural wages as well as a nonnegative effect of real agricultural prices on fertility. Furthermore, it is demonstrated that there is strongly decreasing returns to scale with respect to labour in the agricultural sector and approximately constant returns to scale in the manufacturing sector. The analysis provides evidence in favour of the usual Malthusian model, as invoked by unified growth theories such as e.g. Galor and Weil (Am Econ Rev 90:806–828, 2000).

AB - To shed light on the economic-demographic mechanisms operating in the epoch of pre-industrial economic stagnation, a two-sector Malthusian model is formulated in terms of a cointegrated vector autoregressive model on error correction form. The model allows for both agricultural product wages and relative prices to affect fertility. The model is estimated using new data for the pre-industrial period in England, and the analysis reveals a strong, positive effect of agricultural wages as well as a nonnegative effect of real agricultural prices on fertility. Furthermore, it is demonstrated that there is strongly decreasing returns to scale with respect to labour in the agricultural sector and approximately constant returns to scale in the manufacturing sector. The analysis provides evidence in favour of the usual Malthusian model, as invoked by unified growth theories such as e.g. Galor and Weil (Am Econ Rev 90:806–828, 2000).

U2 - 10.1007/s11698-011-0072-5

DO - 10.1007/s11698-011-0072-5

M3 - Journal article

SP - 63

EP - 77

JO - Cliometrica

JF - Cliometrica

SN - 1863-2505

IS - 6

ER -

ID: 37774555