Institutional change and American economic growth

Bibliographic Information

Institutional change and American economic growth

by Lance E. Davis and Douglass C. North ; with the assistance of Calla Smorodin

Cambridge University Press, 2008

  • : pbk

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Note

"First published 1971. This digitally printed version 2008"--T.p. verso

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This book presents a model for examining problems of institutional change and applies it to American economic development in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. The authors develop their model of institutional change. They argue that if external economic factors make an increase in income possible but not attainable within the existing institutional structure, new organizations must be developed to achieve the potential in income. Their model is designed to explain the type and timing of these necessary changes in institutional organization. Individual, voluntary cooperative, and governmental arrangements are included in the discussion, although the latter differs considerably from the first two.

Table of Contents

  • Part I. The Theory Developed: 1. A theory of institutional change: concepts and causes
  • 2. The government, coercion, and the redistribution of income
  • 3. A theory of institutional innovation: description, analogy, specification
  • 4. Changes in the institutional environment: exogenous shifts and arrangemental innovation
  • Part II. The Theory Applied: 5. Land policy and American agriculture
  • 6. Organization and reorganization in the financial markets: savings and investment in the American economy, 1820-1950
  • 7. Transportation developments and economic growth
  • 8. Economies of scale, unsuccessful cartelization, and external costs: some sidelights on the growth of manufacturing in the United States
  • 9. Institutional change in the service industries
  • 9. The labor force: organization and education
  • Part III. Conclusions: 11. The changing public-private mix
  • 12. History and the analysis of arrangemental change: a look to the past with an eye to the future.

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