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Jutta Bolt . Photo

Jutta Bolt

Senior lecturer

Jutta Bolt . Photo

Two concerns about the interpretation of the estimates of historical national accounts before 1850

Author

  • Jan Luiten Van Zanden
  • Jutta Bolt

Summary, in English

As contribution to the debate about the interpretation of the process of economic growth before the Industrial Revolution, we discuss two concerns about the currently available estimates of historical national accounts and the way in which these estimates should be interpreted. Firstly, we argue that estimates of the long-Term trends of economic growth should make use of all information contained in time series of Gross Domestic Product (GDP henceforth), and therefore use standard regression analysis to establish those trends. Secondly, we point to the problem that the time series of historical GDP are based on very different estimation procedures, which probably affect the outcome in terms of the level of GDP per capita in the period before 1850. Both concerns imply that we do not entirely agree with Jack Goldstone's views of pre-industrial growth. In particular, his conclusion that growth was cyclical before 1800 is inconsistent with the available GDP estimates, which point to sustained growth, albeit at a very low rate.

Department/s

  • Department of Economic History

Publishing year

2021

Language

English

Pages

294-300

Publication/Series

Journal of Global History

Volume

16

Issue

2

Document type

Journal article review

Publisher

Cambridge University Press

Topic

  • Economic History

Keywords

  • Accounts
  • Economic Growth
  • Goldstone
  • Industrial Revolution
  • National Accounts
  • Pre-1850

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 1740-0228