Three Essays on the Microfoundations of Social Change
Date
2013-08
Authors
Langrill, Ryan
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Abstract
This dissertation explores the influence of social and cultural factors in nations' transition to modern economic growth. In the first essay, I consider methodological issues involved in using social or cultural explanations as forces that drive `economic' phenomena. In the second essay, V. H. Storr and I do a comparative study of two Japanese cities during the early modern period: Edo and Osaka. Edo's highly bureaucratized society hindered the emergence of commercial culture, while Osaka's absence of bureaucrats allowed a commercial culture to flourish. In the third essay, I consider the aspects of British social networks that gave it advantages over the rest of Europe in achieving modern economic growth.
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Keywords
Economics, Britain, Japan, McCloskey, Modern Economic Growth, Social Capital