Affiliation:
1. IRES, Université catholique de Louvain
2. Northwestern University
Abstract
AbstractIn the centuries leading up to the Industrial Revolution, Western Europe gradually pulled ahead of other world regions in terms of technological creativity, population growth, and income per capita. We argue that superior institutions for the creation and dissemination of productive knowledge help explain the European advantage. We build a model of technological progress in a preindustrial economy that emphasizes the person-to-person transmission of tacit knowledge. The young learn as apprentices from the old. Institutions such as the family, the clan, the guild, and the market organize who learns from whom. We argue that medieval European institutions such as guilds, and specific features such as journeymanship, can explain the rise of Europe relative to regions that relied on the transmission of knowledge within closed kinship systems (extended families or clans).
Funder
National Science Foundation
French-speaking community of Belgium
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Subject
Economics and Econometrics
Cited by
90 articles.
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