Economic Historian & Professor of Early Modern History, The University of Manchester (UK), underwent ancient initiation rite (Habilitation/Dr. phil. habil.)
8/8
Ch. 6. Velocity! Money, Circulation and Economic Development, c.1250–1850
Ch. 7. Creating Wealth: Homo Manufacturabilis and the Wealth of Nations
Ch. 8. Manufacturing Wealth: Industrial Policy and the Rise of the European Economy, 1350–1850s
Epilogue: From Cain to Keynes
7/8
Ch. 3. The Myth of the Myopic State: Governing Economy and the Politics of Economic Change, 1250s–1850s
Ch. 4. Configuring Free Markets: A Deeper History of Laissez-Faire
Ch. 5. Money and the Rise of Modern Capitalism
@nunopgpalma Apart from Spain - 1st receiver - nearly all other European fiscal-military states developed manufacturing early on, substituting for lack of native precious metal resources. This drive toward industry is manifest in early modern Cameralist / mercantilist political economy.
Dirty Money, #Capitalism & the Anthropocene - Take a trip back in time with Economic Historian @PhilippRoessner & uncover the dirty origins of money!
Marking the first in a series of blogs exploring the complex relationships between #money & #environment.
https://t.co/AHwwUUJeSz
Rage Against the Party Machine! 🇬🇧
Johnson out! 🤡
my good friend @PhilippRoessner agrees!
And on this I can agree with the labour party (which now actually has a decent leader again)
https://t.co/54A2DqcHFJ
Rage Against the Party Machine! 🇬🇧
Johnson out! 🤡
my good friend @PhilippRoessner agrees!
And on this I can agree with the labour party (which now actually has a decent leader again)
https://t.co/54A2DqcHFJ
@histarch Einfach freundlich unter Verweis auf genannte Gründe absagen, auf die Unmöglichkeit der genannten Anfrage verweisen und ggf. Gleichstellungsbeauftragte*n involvieren/aktivieren?
@pseudoerasmus@nunopgpalma@joefrancis505@dkedrosky@antonhowes This raises another important point & debate among (some) Econ historians: In the Quantity Theory of Money, does credit belong to M or V? Important in determining monetary impacts of a simultaneous decline of credit and "hard cash"
@pseudoerasmus@nunopgpalma@joefrancis505@dkedrosky@antonhowes nice one! The traditional view (Braudel; Devine, Tobacco Lords) would be that merchants don't really need hard cash for business and profits to flourish. Depends on the nature, depth and quality of the financial networks they operate in (bills of exchange, usances, rates)