Williamson, Jeffrey G., 1935-
Date
1935-
Label
Williamson, Jeffrey G., 1935-
Name
Williamson, Jeffrey G.
Actions
Incoming Resources
- The Cambridge history of capitalism / edited by Larry Neal and Jeffrey G. Williamson
- The impact of immigration on American labor markets prior to the quotas
- Capital goods prices, global capital markets and accumulation, 1870-1950
- Does globalization make the world more unequal
- Growth, inequality, and globalization, theory, history, and policy, Philippe Aghion and Jeffrey G. Williamson
- Where did British foreign capital go?, fundamentals, failures and the Lucas paradox 1870-1913
- Why did the tariff-growth correlation reverse after 1950?
- Global migration and the world economy, two centuries of policy and performance, Timothy J. Hatton and Jeffrey G. Williamson
- Open economy forces and late 19th century Scandinavian catch-up
- When did globalization begin?
- Modeling growing economies in equilibrium and disequilibrium, edited by Allen C. Kelley, Warren C. Sanderson, and Jeffrey G. Williamson
- A tariff-growth paradox?, protection's impact the world around 1875-1997
- Freight rates and productivity gains in British tramp shipping 1869-1950
- Where do U.S. immigrants come from, and why?
- The Heckscher-Ohlin model between 1400 and 2000, when it explained factor price convergence, when it did not, and why
- The new comparative economic history, essays in honor of Jeffrey G. Williamson, edited by Timothy J. Hatton, Kevin H. O'Rourke, and Alan M. Taylor
- Globalization in Latin America before 1940
- After Columbus, explaining the global trade boom 1500-1800
- Unequal gains, American growth and inequality since 1700, Peter H. Lindert and Jeffrey G. Williamson
- What fundamentals drive world migration?
- From malthus to Ohlin, trade, growth and distribution since 1500
- Asian demography and foreign capital dependence
- Demographic and economic pressure on emigration out of Africa
- The age of mass migration, causes and economic impact, Timothy J. Hatton, Jeffrey G. Williamson
- Convergence in the age of mass migration
- Globalization in historical perspective, edited by Michael D. Bordo, Alan M. Taylor, and Jeffrey G. Williamson
- Land, labor and the wage-rental ratio, factor price convergence in the late nineteenth century
- The Cambridge history of capitalism, edited by Larry Neal, Jeffrey G. Williamson, Volume 2
- Globalization and history, the evolution of a nineteenth-century Atlantic economy, Kevin H. OʼRourke and Jeffrey G. Williamson
- Were Heckschler and Ohlin right?, putting the factor-price-equalization theorem back into history
- Racism, xenophobia or markets?, the political economy of immigration policy prior to the thirties
- Migration and the international labor market, 1850-1939, edited by Timothy J. Hatton and Jeffrey G. Williamson
- The terms of trade and economic growth in the periphery 1870-1983
- The Heckscher-Ohlin model between 1400 and 2000, when it explained factor price convergence, when it did not, and why
- Around the European periphery 1870-1913, globalization, schooling and growth
- The Cambridge History of capitalism, edited by Larry Neal, Jeffrey G. Williamson, Volume 1
- Lessons from Japanese development, an analytical economic history, Allen C. Kelley, Jeffrey G. Williamson
- Terms of trade shocks and economic performance 1870-1940, Prebisch and Singer revisited
- What drives third world city growth?, a dynamic general equilibrium approach, Allen C. Kelly and Jeffrey G. Williamson
- Convergence in the age of mass migration
- From Malthus to Ohlin, trade, growth and distribution since 1500
- Growth, inequality and globalization, theory, history and policy, Philippe Aghion, and Jeffrey G. Williamson
- Were trade and factor mobility substitutes inm history?
- Dualistic economic development, theory and history, Allen C. Kelley, Jeffrey G. Williamson [and] Russell J. Cheetham
- Were Heckschler and Ohlin right?, putting history back into the factor-price-equalization
- The Mediterranean response to globalization before 1950, edited by Sevket Pamuk and Jeffrey G. Williamson
- Late-comers to mass emigration, the Latin experience
- What drove the mass migrations from Europe in the late nineteenth century?
- Demographic transitions and economic miracles in emerging Asia
- Closed jaguar, open dragon, comparing tariffs in Latin America and Asia before World War II
- Creator of20
- Inequality, poverty, and history, the Kuznets memorial lectures of the Economic Growth Center, Yale University, Jeffrey G. Williamson
- The evolution of global labor markets in the first and second world since 1830, background evidence and hypotheses
- Real wages and relative factor prices in the Third World before 1940, what do they tell us about the sources of growth?
- American growth and the balance of payments 1820-1913, a study of the long swing
- Globalization, convergence and history
- Globalization and inequality then and now, the late 19th and late 20th centuries compared
- Globalization and the poor periphery before 1950, Jeffrey G. Williamson
- Real wages and relative factor prices in the Third World 1820-1940, Asia
- Real wages and relative factor prices in the Third World 1820-1940, Latin America
- Real wages and relative factor prices in the Third World 1820-1940, the Mediterranean Basin
- Coping with city growth during the British Industrial Revolution, Jeffrey G. Williamson
- Mass migration, commodity market integration and real wage convergence, the late nineteenth century Atlantic economy
- Late nineteenth-century American development, a general equilibrium history, Jeffrey G. Williamson
- Growth, distribution and demography, some lessons from history
- Was it Stolper-Samuelson, infant industry or something else?, world tariffs 1789-1938
- Land, labor and globalization in the pre-industrial third world
- The impact of globalization on pre-industrial, technologically quiescent economies, real wages, relative factor prices and commodity price convergence in the Third World before 1940
- Trade and poverty, when the Third World fell behind, Jeffrey G. Williamson
- Globalization and the poor periphery before 1950, Jeffrey G. Williamson
- Winners and losers over two centuries of globalization
- Author of2
- inverse.editor3