Industrial Society

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The Experts below are selected from a list of 213 Experts worldwide ranked by ideXlab platform

Johan Fourie - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • The dynamics of inequality in a newly settled, pre-Industrial Society: the case of the Cape Colony
    Cliometrica, 2010
    Co-Authors: Johan Fourie, Dieter Fintel
    Abstract:

    One reason for the relatively poor development performance of many countries around the world today may be the high levels of inequality during and after colonisation. Evidence from colonies in the Americas suggests that skewed initial factor endowments could create small elites that own a disproportionate share of wealth, human capital and political power. The Cape Colony, founded in 1652 at the southern tip of Africa, presents a case where a mercantilist company (the Dutch East India Company) settled on the land and established a unique set of institutions, within which inequality evolved. This paper provides a long-run quantitative analysis of trends in asset-based inequality (using principal components analysis on tax inventories) during the seventeenth and eighteenth century, allowing, for the first time, a dynamic rather than static analysis of inequality trends in a newly settled and pre-Industrial Society over this period. While theory testing in other societies has been severely limited because of a scarcity of quantitative evidence, this study presents a history with evidence, enabling an evaluation of the Engerman--Sokoloff and other hypotheses.

  • the dynamics of inequality in a newly settled pre Industrial Society the case of the cape colony
    2009
    Co-Authors: Johan Fourie, Dieter Von Fintel
    Abstract:

    One reason for the relatively poor development performance of many countries around the world today may be the high levels of inequality during and after colonisation. Evidence from colonies in the Americas suggests that skewed initial factor endowments could create small elites that owned a disproportionate share of wealth, human capital and political power. The Cape Colony, founded in 1652 at the southern tip of Africa, presents a case where a mercantilist company (the Dutch East India Company) settles the land and establishes a unique set of institutions within which inequality and development evolve. This paper provides a long-run quantitative analysis of trends in asset-based inequality (using Principle Components' Analysis on tax inventories) during the seventeenth and eighteenth century, allowing, for the first time, a dynamic rather than static analysis of inequality trends in a newly settled and pre-Industrial Society over this period. While theory testing in other societies has been severely limited because of a scarcity of quantitative evidence, this study presents a history with evidence, enabling an evaluation of the Engerman-Sokoloff and other hypotheses.

Anja Walter - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • Reap The Whirlwind Industrial Society Uncontrolled
    2016
    Co-Authors: Anja Walter
    Abstract:

    reap the whirlwind Industrial Society uncontrolled is available in our digital library an online access to it is set as public so you can download it instantly. Our books collection spans in multiple locations, allowing you to get the most less latency time to download any of our books like this one. Merely said, the reap the whirlwind Industrial Society uncontrolled is universally compatible with any devices to read.

Torsten Werner - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • Reap The Whirlwind Industrial Society Uncontrolled
    2016
    Co-Authors: Torsten Werner
    Abstract:

    reap the whirlwind Industrial Society uncontrolled is available in our book collection an online access to it is set as public so you can download it instantly. Our book servers spans in multiple countries, allowing you to get the most less latency time to download any of our books like this one. Merely said, the reap the whirlwind Industrial Society uncontrolled is universally compatible with any devices to read.

Dieter Fintel - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • The dynamics of inequality in a newly settled, pre-Industrial Society: the case of the Cape Colony
    Cliometrica, 2010
    Co-Authors: Johan Fourie, Dieter Fintel
    Abstract:

    One reason for the relatively poor development performance of many countries around the world today may be the high levels of inequality during and after colonisation. Evidence from colonies in the Americas suggests that skewed initial factor endowments could create small elites that own a disproportionate share of wealth, human capital and political power. The Cape Colony, founded in 1652 at the southern tip of Africa, presents a case where a mercantilist company (the Dutch East India Company) settled on the land and established a unique set of institutions, within which inequality evolved. This paper provides a long-run quantitative analysis of trends in asset-based inequality (using principal components analysis on tax inventories) during the seventeenth and eighteenth century, allowing, for the first time, a dynamic rather than static analysis of inequality trends in a newly settled and pre-Industrial Society over this period. While theory testing in other societies has been severely limited because of a scarcity of quantitative evidence, this study presents a history with evidence, enabling an evaluation of the Engerman--Sokoloff and other hypotheses.

Dieter Von Fintel - One of the best experts on this subject based on the ideXlab platform.

  • the dynamics of inequality in a newly settled pre Industrial Society the case of the cape colony
    2009
    Co-Authors: Johan Fourie, Dieter Von Fintel
    Abstract:

    One reason for the relatively poor development performance of many countries around the world today may be the high levels of inequality during and after colonisation. Evidence from colonies in the Americas suggests that skewed initial factor endowments could create small elites that owned a disproportionate share of wealth, human capital and political power. The Cape Colony, founded in 1652 at the southern tip of Africa, presents a case where a mercantilist company (the Dutch East India Company) settles the land and establishes a unique set of institutions within which inequality and development evolve. This paper provides a long-run quantitative analysis of trends in asset-based inequality (using Principle Components' Analysis on tax inventories) during the seventeenth and eighteenth century, allowing, for the first time, a dynamic rather than static analysis of inequality trends in a newly settled and pre-Industrial Society over this period. While theory testing in other societies has been severely limited because of a scarcity of quantitative evidence, this study presents a history with evidence, enabling an evaluation of the Engerman-Sokoloff and other hypotheses.