Search results for "jel:N73"

showing 3 items of 3 documents

Labour market response to globalisation: spain, 1880-1913

2010

Abstract This paper analyses the impact of globalisation (trade and migration) on the Spanish labour market between 1880 and 1913 by examining the influence that globalisation factors had on agricultural and industrial wages. Our results show that the nineteenth century grain invasion had a negative impact on agricultural wages, whereas the fall in wheat prices did not benefit industry workers. We also found that migration pushed up real agricultural and industrial wages. As agriculture was the main sector in the economy, the final impact was a wage decrease. The negative impact of trade on agricultural and industrial labour markets partly explains the trade policy response of “integral pro…

Commercial policyEconomics and EconometricsHistoryLabour economicsbusiness.industrymedia_common.quotation_subjectWageglobalisation trade migration tariffs wages living standardsStandard of livingMarket responseGlobalizationjel:N73AgricultureEconomicsjel:N33businessmedia_common
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Sharing Mare Nostrum: An Analysis of Mediterranean Maritime History Articles in English-Language Journals.

2015

This discussion paper is a follow-up to a previous bibliometric analysis of articles published in The International Journal of Maritime History and maritime-themed articles published in other economic and business history journals over the last 25 years. The paper looks more closely at articles dealing with the Mediterranean and articles written by scholars from the Mediterranean countries. The article is structured around five propositions about current trends in Mediterranean maritime history publishing in English-language journals.

Mediterranean climateBibliometric analysisbusiness.industryLibrary scienceEnglish languagejel:N70jel:N74Geographyjel:N73Publishingjel:N01businessHumanitiesBusiness historyMaritime historyMaritime history;SSRN Electronic Journal
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Market potential estimates in history: a survey of methods and an application to Spain, 1867-1930

2014

New Economic Geography (NEG) models stress the importance of access to demand as a key driver of the spatial and temporal distribution of economic activity (Krugman, 1991). Therefore, in order to test the theoretical predictions emanating from NEG a sound measure of accessibility is required. In line with Crafts (2005b), this paper constructs market potential estimates for Spain at the province level (NUTS3) between 1867 and 1930 using Harris’s (1954) equation. This period is particularly appealing as it was during these years that the Spanish market became integrated thanks to the fall in transport and trade costs. A number of key processes, including the substitution of traditional transp…

jel:F15jel:N74jel:N73jel:R12Market potential Economic Geography Economic History
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