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Nature or Nurture? Explaining English Wheat Yields in the Industrial Revolution, c.1770

Abstract:
This article presents the first agricultural production function for the eighteenth century, thereby quantifying the effect of many new technologies coming on stream in English agriculture. It shows that some traditional technologies were effective in raising wheat yields, such as drainage and marling; but some innovations of the eighteenth century were much more effective, particularly turnips and seed drills. Environmental factors are incorporated into the model. Climate is shown to be a crucial factor in determining yields but soil quality was much less important. This undermines the accepted argument that England’s success was due to a superior natural endowment.

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Brunt, Liam


Publisher:
Economic History Association
Journal:
Journal of Economic History More from this journal
Issue:
64
Publication date:
2004-01-01


Subjects:
UUID:
uuid:15ca875a-35e2-4bb4-8390-73b8d1f85ad8
Local pid:
ora:789
Source identifiers:
http://sers009b.sers.ox.ac.uk/archive/00000873/
Deposit date:
2012-11-15
ARK identifier:

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