Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-p9bg8 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-24T16:09:01.243Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

La « New Economie History »

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 July 2017

Extract

La New Economic History occupe sans nul doute une place peu commune. L'école a douze ans d'âge, ayant présenté ses premiers travaux en 1957. Ses membres se trouvent maintenant établis dans les principales universités américaines. Et ses idées ont été largement diffusées. Pourtant le groupe formateur n'a rien perdu de sa cohésion. A la fois parce que les économistes qui le composent en majorité continuent de poursuivre ensemble leurs recherches et de se réunir au moins une fois l'an : la neuvième session de leur séminaire, la Purdue Conference on the Application of Economic Theory and Quantitative Techniques to Problems of Economic History, s'est tenue en février 1969.

Type
Frontiéres Nouvelles
Copyright
Copyright © Les Éditions de l’EHESS 1969

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1. Abramovrrz, M., « Resource and Output Trends in the U.S. Since 1870 », American Econ, Rev., Pap. andProc, XLVI (1956), pp. 534.Google Scholar
2. Abramovitz, M., « Economie Growth in the U.S. », Amer. Econ. Rev., LU (1962), n” 4, pp. 762-782.Google Scholar
3. Andreano, R., New Views on American Economie Development (Cambridge, Mass. 1965).Google Scholar
4. Cochran, T. C. et Brewer, T. B., Views of American Economie Growth (New York, 2 vol., 1966).Google Scholar
5.« Trends in the American Economy in the XIXth Century », Studies in Income and Wealth, vol. 24, Nber (Princeton, 1960).Google Scholar
6.« Output, Employment and Productivity in the United States After 1800 », Studies in Income and Wealth, vol. 30, Nber (New York, 1966).Google Scholar
7. Davis, L. E., Hughes, J. R. T. et Mcdougall, D. M., American Economie History (Homewood, 2’ éd., 1965).Google Scholar
8. Duesenberry, J. S., « Some Aspects of the Theory of Economie Development », Expl. Entrep. Hist., III (1950), pp. 63102.Google Scholar
9.Essays in the Quantitative Study of Economie Growth, presented to Simon Kuznets, Econ. Dev. and Cuit. Change, IX (1961), n° 3.Google Scholar
10. Fabricant, S., « The Study of Economie Growth », Nber, Ann. Rep. 39 (1959), pp. 1-13.Google Scholar
11. Fogel, R. W., « The Spécification Problem in Economie History », Journ. Econ. Hist., XXVII (1967), n° 3, pp. 283308.Google Scholar
12. Gallman, R. E., « Commodity Output, 1839-1899 », Trends, NBER, vol. 24, pp. 1371.Google Scholar
13. Gallman, R. E., « Estimâtes of American National Product Made Before the Civil War », Econ. Dev. and Cuit. Change, IX (1961), pp. 397412.Google Scholar
14. Gallman, R. E., « Gross National Product in the United States, 1834-1909 », Output, NBER, vol. 30, pp. 376.Google Scholar
15. Gutman, P. M., éd., Economie Growth : an American Problem (Englewood Cliffs, N. J., 1964).Google Scholar
16. Harris, S. E., éd., American Economie History (New York, 1961).Google Scholar
17. Jaszi, G., « The Aggregate Economie Growth : a Review of Key Conceptual and Statistical Issues as suggested by United States Expérience », Rev. Econ. and Stat LU (1961), n” 4, pp. 317-332.Google Scholar
18. Kuznets, S., Income and Wealth of the United States, Trends and Structures (Cambridge, 1952).Google Scholar
19. Kuznets, S., « The Interrelation of Theory and History : Summary of Discussion and Postscript », Journ. Econ. Hist., XVII (1957), pp. 545553.Google Scholar
20. Kuznets, S., « Notes on the Pattern of U.S. Economie Growth », in Economie Growth and Structure (New York, 1965).Google Scholar
21. North, D. C., « Early National Income Estimâtes of the U. S. », Econ. Dev. and Cuit. Change, IX (1961), pp. 387396.Google Scholar
22. North, D. C., The Economie Growth ofthe United States,1790-1860 (New York, 1961).Google Scholar
23. North, D. C., Growth and Welfare in the American Past. A New Economie History (New York, 1966).Google Scholar
24. Nash, G. D., Issues in American Economie History (Boston, 1964).Google Scholar
25. Perloff, H. S. et coll., Régions, Resources and Economie Growth (Baltimore, 1960).Google Scholar
26. Taylor, G. R., « Economie Growth in the U.S. before 1840 : an Explanatory Essay », Journ. Econ. Hist., XXIV (1964), n” 4, pp. 427444.Google Scholar
27.U.S. Congress, Joint Economie Comittee in Economie Growth, Hearings, pt II, Historical and Comparative Rates of Production, Productivity and Priées, 86th Cong., 1 st sess., 1959, pp. 278 et sqq.Google Scholar
28.U.S. Dept. of Commerce, Bureau of the Census, Historical Statistics of the U.S. Colonial Times to 1957. Continuation to 1962 (Washington, 1965).Google Scholar
29. H. F., Williamson, éd., The Growth of the American Economy (Englewood Cliffs N. J., 9e éd., 1965).Google Scholar
30. Budd, E. C., « Factor Shares, 1850-1910 », Trends, NBER, vol. 24, pp. 365406.Google Scholar
31. Davis, L. E. et Gallman, R. E., « The Share of Savings and Investment in Gross National Product in the XIXth Century U.S. of America », IVth Cong. Intern. Econ. Hist. Assoc. (Bloomington, Ind., 1968).Google Scholar
32. Denison, E. F., The Sources of Economie Growth in the U.S. and the Alternatives before US> Supplem. Paper n° 13 ; Committee for Econ. Dev. (New York, 1962).Google Scholar
33. Easterlin, R. A., « Interrégional Différences in Per Capita Income, Population and Total Income, 1840-1950 », Trends, NBER, vol. 24, pp. 73140.Google Scholar
34. Easterlin, R. A., Economic-Demographic Interactions and Long Swings in Economie Growth, Amer. Econ. Rev., LVI (1966), n° 5, pp. 10631104.Google Scholar
35. Engerman, S., « Régional Incomes in the XIXth Century », Purdue, VlIIth Seminar, 1968.Google Scholar
36. Fishlow, A., « Productivity and Technological Change in the Railroad Sector, 1840-1910 », Output, NBER, vol. 30, pp. 583646.Google Scholar
37. Goldsmtth, R. W., A Study of Saving in the U.S. (Princeton, 3 vol. 1955).Google Scholar
38. Hoselitz, B. F., « Some Problems in the Quantitative Study of Industrialisation », Econ. Dev. and Cuit. Change, IX (1961), pp. 537549.Google Scholar
39. Kessel, R. A. et Alchian, A. A., « Real Wages in the North during the Civil War : Mitchell's data reinterpreted », Journ. ofLaw and Econ., II (1959), pp. 95113.Google Scholar
40. Korns, A., « Real Wages and Foreign Trade in the Civil War Era », Purdue IXth Seminar, 1969.Google Scholar
41. Kuznets, S., Capital in the American Economy : its Formation andFinancing (Princeton, 1961).Google Scholar
42. Layer, R., Earnings ofCotton Mill Operatives, 1825-1914 (Cambridge, 1955).Google Scholar
43. Lebergott, S., Manpower in Economie Development (New York, 1964).Google Scholar
44. Lee, E. S., Kuznets, S. et coll., Population Redistribution and Economie Growth, United States, 1870-1950 (Philadelphie, 3 vol., 1957-1964).Google Scholar
45. Long, C. D., The Labor Force under Changing Income and Employment, NBER 65 (Princeton, 1965).Google Scholar
46. Long, C. D., Wages and Earnings in the U.S., 1860-1890 (Princeton, 1960).Google Scholar
47. Moore, G. H., « Secular Changes in the Distribution of Income », Americ. Econ. Rev., Pap. and Proc, XLII (1952), n° 2, pp. 527544.Google Scholar
48. Parker, W. N. et Klein, J. L. V., « Productivity Growth in Grain Production in the U.S., 1840-1860 and 1900-1910 », Trends, NBER, vol. 30, pp. 523582.Google Scholar
49. Parker, W. N., « Productivity in Corn and Cotton Production in the South, 1860-1910 ». Purdue VlIIth Seminar, 1968. Google Scholar
50. Rees, A., Real Wages in Manufacturing, 1890-1914, NBER (Princeton, 1961).Google Scholar
51. Schmookler, J., « The Changing Efficiency of the American Economy, 1869-1938 », Rev. Econ. and Stat., XXXIV (1952), pp. 214231.Google Scholar
52. Schmookler, J., Invention and Economie Growth (Cambridge, 1966).Google Scholar
53. Solow, R., « Technical Progress, Capital Formation and Economie Growth », Amer. Econ. Rev., LU (1962), n° 2, pp. 78-86.Google Scholar
54. Yasuba, Y., Birth Rates of the White Population in the U.S., 1800-1860 (Baltimore, 1961).Google Scholar
55. Abramovttz, M., « The Nature and Significance of Kuznets Cycles », Econ. Dev. Cuit. Change, DC (1961), pp. 225-248.Google Scholar
56. BJÔRK, G. C., « The Weaning of the American Economy : Independence, Market Change and Economie Development », Journ. Econ. Hist., XXIV (1964), n° 4, pp. 541560.Google Scholar
57. Bogue, A. G., From Prairie to Corn Belt. Farming on the Illinois and Iowa Prairies in the XIXth Century (Chicago, 1963).Google Scholar
58. Bogue, A. et M., « Profits and the Frontier Land Speculator », Journ. Econ. Hist., XVII (1957), n° 1, pp. 124.Google Scholar
59. Bowman, J. D., « An Economie Analysis of Midwestern Farm Land Values and Farm Land Income, 1860 to 1900 », Yole Econ. Essays, V (1965), n° 2, pp. 317352.Google Scholar
60. Broude, H. W., « The Rôle of the State in American Economie Development, 1820-1890 », in Aitken, H. G., The State and Economie Growth (New York, 1959), pp. 4250.Google Scholar
61. brown, E. Cary, « Fiscal Policy in the Thirties : a Reappraisal », Amer. Econ. Rev., XLVI (1956), n° 5, pp. 857879.Google Scholar
62. Cochran, T. C., « Did the Civil War Retard Industrialization ? », Mississippi Valley Hist. Rev., XLVIII (1961), pp. 197210.Google Scholar
63. Conrad, A. H., « Econometrics and Southern History », Expl. Entr. Hist., 2d séries, VI (1968), n° 1, pp. 3453.Google Scholar
64. Conrad, A. H. et Meyer, J. R., The Economies of Slavery and Other Studies in Econometric History (Chicago, 1964).Google Scholar
65. Danhof, C. D., « Farm Cost and the Safety Valve : 1850-1860 », Journ. Polit. Econ., XLIX (1941), pp. 317359.Google Scholar
66. Davis, L. E. et Stettler, H. L., « The New England Textile Industry, 1825-1860 : Trends and Fluctuations », Output, NBER, vol. 30, pp. 213238.Google Scholar
67. Engerman, S. L., « The Economie Impact of the Civil War », Explor. Entrep. Hist., 2d s., III (1966), n° 3, pp. 176199.Google Scholar
68. Fishlow, A., « Antebellum Interrégional Trade Reconsidered », Amer. Econ. Rev., LIX (1964), n° 3, pp. 352364.Google Scholar
69. Fishlow, A., American Railroads and the Transformation of the Antebellum Economy (Cambridge, Mass., 1965).Google Scholar
70. Fogel, R. W., The Union Pacific Railroads : a Case of Prématuré Enterprise (Baltimore, 1960).Google Scholar
71. Fogel, R. W., Railroads and Economie Growth, Essays in Econometric History (Baltimore, 1964).Google Scholar
72. Fogel, R. W. et Engerman, S., « A Model for the Explanation of Industrialisation during the XIXth Century, with an Application to the American Iron Industry », Purdue Vhith Seminar, 1968. Google Scholar
73. Homer, S., A History oflnterest Rates (New Brunswick, N.J., 1963).Google Scholar
74. Kindleberger, C. P., « The U.S. Balance of Payments in the XIXth Century : a Review Article », Expl. Entrep. Hist., 2d S., III (1966), p. 50 et sqq.Google Scholar
75. Mcgouldrick, P. F., The New England Textile Industry (Cambridge, Mass., 1968).Google Scholar
76. Nelson, R. L., Merger Movements in American Industry, 1895-1956, NBER 66 (Princeton, 1956).Google Scholar
77. North, D. C., « Océan Freight Rates and Economie Development, 1750-1913 », Journ. Econ. Hist., XVIII (1958), n° 4, pp. 537555.Google Scholar
78. North, D. C., « The Rôle of Transportation in the Economie Development of North America », Cong. intern. des Se. hist. (Vienne, 1965).Google Scholar
79. Primack, M. L., « Farm Capital Formation as a Use of Farm Labour in the U.S., 1850-1910 », Journ. Econ. Hist., XXVI (1966), n° 3, pp. 348362.Google Scholar
80. Ransom, R. L., « Canals and Development : a Discussion of the Issues », Amer. Econ. Rev., Pap. andProc, LIV (1964), ne 3, pp. 365376.Google Scholar
81. Ransom, R. L., « British Policy and Colonial Growth : Some Implications of the Burden from the Navigation Acts, » Journ. Econ. Hist., XXVIII (1968), n° 3, pp. 427435.Google Scholar
82. Shepherd, J. M., « A Balance of Payments for the Thirteen Colonies, 1768-1772 », Journ. Econ. Hist., XXV (1965), n° 4, pp. 691695.Google Scholar
83. Shepherd, J. M. et Walton, G. M., « Estimate of Invisible Earnings in the Balance of Payments of the British North American Colonies, 1768-1772 », Purdue Vihth Seminar, 1968 et Journ. Econ. Hist., XIX (1969), n° 2, pp. 230263.Google Scholar
84. Swierenga, P., Pioneers and Profits (Ames, Iowa, 1969).Google Scholar
85. Temin, P., Iron and Steel in XIXth Century America. An Economie Inquiry (Cambridge, Mass., 1964).Google Scholar
86. Thomas, R. P., « A Quantitative Approach to the Study of the Effects of British Impérial Policy upon Colonial Welfare : Some Preliminary Findings », Journ. Econ. Hist., XXV (1965), n° 4, pp. 615638.Google Scholar
87. Thomas, R. P., « British Impérial Policy and the Economie Interprétation of the American Révolution », Journ. Econ. Hist., XXVIII (1968), n° 3, pp. 436440.Google Scholar
88. Towne, M. W. et Rasmussen, W. D., « Farm Gross Product and Gross Investment in the XIXth Century », Trends, Nber, vol. 24, pp. 255325.Google Scholar
89. Yasuba, Y., « The Profitability and Viability of Plantation Slavery in the U.S. », Econ. Studies Quarterly, XII (1961), n° 1, pp. 6067.Google Scholar
90. Williamson, J. G., American Growth and the Balance of Payments, 1820-1913 (Chapel Hill, 1964).Google Scholar
91. Williamson, J. G., « Antebellum Urbanization in the American Northeast », Journ. Econ, Hist., XXV (1965), n° 4, pp. 593608.Google Scholar
92. Zevin, R. B., « The Growth of Manufacturing in Early XIXth Century New England », Journ. Econ. Hist., XXV (1965), n° 4, pp. 680682.Google Scholar