Skip to main content Skip to navigation

Economic Development In Africa And Europe : Reciprocal Comparisons

Economic Development In Africa And Europe : Reciprocal Comparisons

232/2015 Stephen Broadberry & Leigh Gardner
economic history, working papers
Revista de Historia Económica
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0212610915000348

232/2015 Stephen Broadberry & Leigh Gardner

Recent advances in historical national accounting have allowed for global comparisons of GDP per capita across space and time. Critics have argued that GDP per capita fails to capture adequately the effects of new technology on living standards, and have developed alternative measures such as the human development index (HDI). Whilst recognising that this provides an appropriate measure for assessing levels of welfare, we argue that GDP per capita remains a more appropriate measure for assessing development potential, encompassing production as well as consumption. Twentieth-century Africa and pre-industrial Europe are used to show how such data can guide reciprocal comparisons to provide insights into the process of development on both continents.

Economic History

Revista de Historia Económica

http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0212610915000348