Browser does not support script.
Skip to content
London School of Economics and Political Science
Search
Menu
Department of Economic History
Toggle navigation
Study
People
Research
News
Job Market
Seminars
Events
Working Papers
Alumni
Trending at LSE
How to start and grow a career in data
Virtual Graduate Open Events
PhD Studentships
Information for international students
Graduate degrees: fees and funding
Make the most of your first weeks at LSE
Students at LSE Blog
Apply
Got an admissions question? Check our Admissions Knowledge Base
Study at LSE
Undergraduate
Graduate
Executive Education
Online courses
Summer School
Study abroad
Student life
Accommodation
Research
Engagement and impact support for LSE researchers
Discover our research
LSE Blogs
Research for the World online magazine
LSE Press
Find LSE academics
Research centres
Understanding Global Politics
Our REF 2021 results
News & events
Latest news
Upcoming events
Films & podcasts
Media queries
About LSE
An introduction
Our Campaign
Our strategy
LSE leadership
Departments & institutes
Divisions
Library
Members of CIVICA
Term dates
Contact us
Quick links for
Current students
Find support for students at LSE
Paying fees
Staff
Jobs at LSE
Alumni & friends
Business & employers
Careers service
Close
Search
Go
Department of Economic History
Working papers
Working papers 2008
Working papers 2008
N°113
Understanding West German Economic Growth in the 1950s
Barry Eichengreen and Albrecht Ritschl
N°112
The U.S. Business Cycle, 1867-1995: Dynamic Factor Analysis vs. Reconstructed National Accounts
Albrecht Ritschl, Samad Sarferaz and Martin Uebele
N°111
A Stakeholder Empire: The Political Economy of Spanish Imperial Rule in America
Regina Grafe and Alejandra Irigoin
N°110
The Economic History of Sovereignty: Communal Responsibility, the Extended Family, and the Firm
Lars Boerner and Albrecht Ritschl
N°109
The History, Nature and Economic Significance of an Exceptional Fiscal State for the Growth of the British Economy, 1453-1815
Patrick O'Brien
N°108
The Anglo-German Productivity Puzzle, 1895-1935: A Restatement and a Possible Solution
Albrecht Ritschl
N°107
'The Big Problem of the Petty Coins', and how it could be solved in the later Middle Ages
Oliver Volckart
Share
Email a link to this page
Share on Facebook
Share on LinkedIn
Browser does not support script.
Browser does not support script.
Browser does not support script.
Browser does not support script.
Browser does not support script.
Browser does not support script.