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Considering the counterfactual: Real wages in the First Industrial Revolution

Considering the counterfactual: Real wages in the First Industrial Revolution

502/2020 Nicholas Crafts and Terence C. Mills
working papers,economic history
Economic Journal
https://doi.org/10.1093/ej/ueab081

502/2020 Nicholas Crafts and Terence C. Mills

We investigate a structural model of demographic-economic interactions for England during 1570 to 1850. We estimate that the annual rate of population growth consistent with constant real wages was 0.4 per cent before 1760 but 1.5 per cent thereafter. We find that exogenous shocks increased population growth dramatically in the early decades of the Industrial Revolution. Simulations of our model show that if these demographic shocks had occurred before the Industrial Revolution the impact on real wages would have been catastrophic and that these shocks were largely responsible for very slow growth of real wages during the Industrial Revolution.

Economic History

Economic Journal

https://doi.org/10.1093/ej/ueab081