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The Proximate Determinants of Domestic Investment in Victorian Britain
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 03 March 2009
Abstract
This paper attempts to shed new light on the proximate determinants of domestic investment in Victorian Britain by focusing on the relationship between asset markets and investment behavior. It demonstrates that Victorian investment fluctuations were associated with divergences between the valuation of installed capital as determined in asset markets and the supply price of new capital as determined in commodity markets. After showing how investment fluctuations in Victorian Britain were related to real equity prices, the paper concludes with a summary of findings on the determinants of real share prices.
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- Papers Presented at the Forty-First Annual Meeting of the Economic History Association
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- Copyright © The Economic History Association 1982
References
1 See for example Cairncross, A. K., Home and Foreign Investment, 1870–1913 (Cambridge, 1953), pp. 187–209;Google ScholarRostow, W. W., British Economy of the Nineteenth Century (Oxford, 1949), pp. 58–89.Google Scholar
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4 Maximizing with respect to L yields a second first-order condition: w = pyfL.Google Scholar
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