悬赏 1000 个论坛币 已解决
* Peter Rousseau and Richard Sylla, “Emerging Markets and Early US Growth,” Explorations in
Economic History (January 2005), 1-26.
* Richard Sylla, “U.S. Securities Markets and the Banking System, 1790-1840.” Federal Reserve
Bank of St Louis Review (May/June 1998), 83-98.
* Hugh Rockoff, “The Free Banking Era: A Reexamination,” Journal of Money, Credit, and
Banking 6:2 (May 1974), 141-167.
* Arthur Rolnick and Warren Weber, “New Evidence on the Free Banking Era,” American
Economic Review 73 (December 1983), 1080-1091.
* Howard Bodenhorn, “Capital Mobility and Financial Integration in Antebellum America,”
Journal of Economic History 52 (September 1992), 585-610.
Bray Hammond, Banks and Politics in America from the Revolution to the Civil War. Princeton:
Princeton University Press, 1957.
Ross Levine, “Financial Development and Economic Growth: Views and Agenda,” Journal of
Economic Literature 35 (June 1997), 688-726.
Ross Levine and Sara Zervos, “Stock Markets, Banks, and Economic Growth,” American
Economic Review 88 (June 1988), 537-58.
Howard Bodenhorn, A History of Banking in Antebellum America: Financial Markets and
Economic Development in an Era of Nation-Building. Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press, 2000.
John James, Money and Capital Markets in Postbellum America. Princeton: Princeton University
Press, 1978.
* Peter Rousseau, “Jacksonian Monetary Policy, Specie Flows, and the Panic of 1837,” Journal
of Economic History 62 (June 2002), 457-488.
* Hugh Rockoff, “The ‘Wizard of Oz’ as Monetary Allegory,” Journal of Political Economy
(August 1990), 739-760.
* Milton Friedman and Anna J. Schwartz, “Factors Accounting for Changes in the Stock of
Money.” Extract from The Great Contraction, reprinted in Historical Perspectives on the
American Economy. Edited by Robert Whaples and Dianne D. Betts. Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press, 1995.
* Ben S. Bernanke, “Nonmonetary Effects of the Financial Crisis in the Propagation of the Great
Depression,” American Economic Review 73:3 (June 1983), 257-276.
Milton Friedman and Anna J. Schwartz, A Monetary History of the United States. Chicago:
Chicago University Press, 1964.
Charles Calomiris and Gary Gorton, “The Origins of Bank Panics: Models, Facts, and Bank
Regulation.” In Financial Markets and Financial Crises. Edited by R. Glenn Hubbard.
Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1991.
Peter Temin, The Jacksonian Economy. New York: W. W. Norton, 1969.
David Cowen, “The First Bank of the United States and the Securities Market Crash of 1792,”
Journal of Economic History 60 (December 2000), 1041-1060.
Jon Moen and Ellis Tallman, “The Bank Panic of 1907: The Role of Trust Companies,” Journal
of Economic History 52 (September 1992), 611-630.
* Jeremy Atack, “Industrial Structure and the Emergence of the Modern Industrial Corporation,”
Explorations in Economic History (1985), 29-52.
* Alfred Chandler, “The Emergence of Managerial Capitalism,” Business History Review 58
(Winter 1984), 473-503.
* Gavin Wright, “The Origins of American Industrial Success, 1879-1940,” American Economic
Review (September 1990), 651-668.
* Alexander Field, “The Most Technologically Progressive Decade of the Century,” American Economic Review 93 (September 2003), 1399-1413.
Alfred Chandler, The Visible Hand: Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1977.
Alfred Chandler, “The Competitive Performance of U.S. Industrial Enterprise since the Second
World War,” Business History Review 68 (Spring 1994), 1-72.
* Harlan Halsey, “The Choice between High-Pressure and Low-Pressure Steam Power in the
Early Nineteenth Century,” Journal of Economic History 41 (1981), 723-744.
* Boyan Jovanovic and Peter Rousseau, “General Purpose Technologies.” In Handbook of
Economic Growth, vol. 1B. Amsterdam: North Holland, 2005.
* Alex Field, “Does Economic History Need General Purpose Technologies?” In The Great
Depression and U.S. Economic Growth. Manuscript 2009.
* Carole Shammas, “A New Look at Long-Term Trends in Wealth Inequality in the United
States,” American Historical Review 98 (April 1993), 412-431.
* Richard H. Steckel and Carolyn Moehling, “Rising Inequality: Trends in the Distribution of
Wealth in Industrializing New England,” Journal of Economic History 61 (March 2001),
160-189
* Thomas Piketty and Emmanuel Saez, “Income Inequality in the United States, 1913-1998,”
NBER working paper, (September 2001).
* Claudia Goldin and Robert Margo, “The Great Compression: The US Wage Structure at Mid
Century,” Quarterly Journal of Economics 107 (1992), 1-34.
Lois Green Carr, “Emigration and the Standard of Living: The Seventeenth Century
Chesapeake,” Journal of Economic History 52 (June 1992), 271-292.
Lee Soltow, “Wealth Inequality in the United States, 1798-1860,” Review of Economics and
Statistics 66 (August 1984), 444-451.
Jeremy Greenwood and Mehmet Yorukoglu, “1974,” Carnegie-Rochester Conference Series on
Public Policy 46, (June 1997), 49-95.
* Richard Steckel, “Stature and the Standard of Living.” Journal of Economic Literature 33
(December 1995), 1903-1940.
* Howard Bodenhorn, “Height and Body Mass Index Values of Nineteenth-Century New York
Legislators.” Economics & Human Biology 8 (2010), 121-126.
* Richard Easterlin, “Income and Happiness: Towards a Unified Theory.” Economic Journal 111
(July 2001), 465-484.
* Hans-Joachim Voth, “Time and Work in Eighteenth Century London.” Journal of Economic
History 58 (1998).
Richard Steckel. “Heights and Human Welfare: Recent Developments and New Directions.”
Explorations in Economic History 46 (2009), 1-23.
John E. Murray, “Standards of the Present for People of the Past: Height, Weight and Mortality
among Men of Amherst College.” Journal of Economic History 57 (1997), 585-606.
David G. Blanchflower, “International Evidence on Well-Being.” In Measuring the Subjective
Well-Being of Nations: National Accounts of Time Use and Well-Being, pp. 155-226 (lots
of tables). Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2010.
* Claudia Goldin and Kenneth Sokoloff, “Women, Children and Industrialization in the Early
Republic: Evidence from the Manufacturing Censuses,” Journal of Economic History 42
(December 1982), 741-74.
* Price Fishback, “Did Coal Miners ‘Owe Their Soul to the Company Store? Theory and
Evidence from the Early 1900s,” Journal of Economic History 46 (December 1986),
1011-1029.
*Mollie Orshansky, “How Poverty is Measured.” Monthly Labor Review (Feb 1969), 37-41.
* Linda Barrington, “Estimating Earnings Poverty in 1939: A Comparison of Orshansky-Method
and Price-Indexed Definitions of Poverty.” Review of Economics and Statistics 79
(1997), 406-414
Claudia Goldin, Understanding the Gender Gap: An Economic History of American Women.
New York: Oxford University Press, 1990.
Price Fishback and Shawn Kantor, “Square Deal or Raw Deal? Market Compensation for
Workplace Disamenities, 1884-1903,” Journal of Economic History 52 (December
1992), 826-848.
Susan Averett, Howard Bodenhorn, and Justas Staisiunas, “Unemployment Risk and
Compensating Differentials in Late Nineteenth Century New Jersey Manufacturing,”
Economic Inquiry 43 (October 2005), 734-749.
John James and Mark Thomas, “Golden Age?: Unemployment and the American Labor Market,
1880-1910,” Journal of Economic History 63 (December 2003), 959-
Janet Currie and Joseph Ferrie, “The Law and Labor Strife in the United States, 1881-1894,”
Journal of Economic History 60 (March 2000), 41-66.
*Andrei Shleifer and Robert Vishny, “Corruption,” Quarterly Journal of Economics 108
(August), 599-617.
* John J. Wallis, “The Concept of Systematic Corruption in American History.” In Corruption
and Reform: Lessons from America’s History, pp. 23-62. Edited by Edward L. Glaeser
and Claudia Goldin. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2006.
* Matthew Gentzkow, Edward L. Glaeser, and Claudia Goldin, “The Rise of the Fourth Estate:
How Newspapers became Informative and Why It Mattered.” In Corruption and Reform:
Lessons from America’s History, pp. 187-230. Edited by Edward L. Glaeser and Claudia
Goldin. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2006.
* Howard Bodenhorn, “Bank Chartering and Political Corruption in Antebellum New York: Free
Banking as Reform.” In Corruption and Reform: Lessons from America’s History, pp.
231-257. Edited by Edward L. Glaeser and Claudia Goldin. Chicago: University of
Chicago Press, 2006.
Susan Rose-Ackerman, Corruption: A Study in Political Economy. New York: Academic Press,
1978.
Edward L. Glaeser and Claudia Goldin, eds. Corruption and Reform: Lessons from America’s
History. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2006.
Paolo Mauro, “Corruption and Growth,” Quarterly Journal of Economics 110 (August 1995),
681-712.
Howard Bodenhorn, Carolyn Moehling and Anne Morrison Piehl, “Immigration: America’s
Nineteenth-Century Law and Order Problem?” In Frontiers of Economics and
Globalization 9 (2011), 295-324.
* Howard Bodenhorn, “Criminal Sentencing in 19th-Century America,” Explorations in
Economic History 46 (2009), 287-298.