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Summary of theme social and economic history

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Summary of all lectures and part of the readings for theme social and economic history. I only studied (made) this summary and got a 8,1.

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  • February 21, 2021
  • 52
  • 2019/2020
  • Summary

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By: qfjvdw • 2 year ago

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By: jelledelange1 • 3 year ago

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Theme economic-social history
Lecture 1
(Drukker page 38-52, 79-102, 140-147)

1. The relation between economic and history
2. Economic growth and welfare: rich and poor
3. Crises, business cycles and continuity


The relation between economic and history

Overview:
 Economic science
 Historical school; ‘methodenstreit’
 Traditional economic history
 Neoclassic, Keynesians and econometrics
 New economic history
 Historical national accounts; measuring the GDP in the long run.

Economic history compromises in the history of (I):

 The economics of countries provinces regions cities and villages In specific periods.
 Very broad
 History of organizations; VOC, Shell, Campina
 Institutional history; water boards, governmental departments
 History of governmental departments; organizing the land
 History of industries; Banks, textile industry, agriculture
 History of technology (how machines change over time)
 History of consumption, advertising f.ex food (both advertising and consuming)


Economic history compromises in the history of (II):

 Economic governmental policies of a country- crisis policy, environmental policy etc.-
and policy of transport and infrastructure)
 A specific economic aspects, (credit, housing, human capital-education)
 Economic behavior of people on an individual level ( motives to work, choices,
strategies) (gender- economical aspects, division of gender tasks in past societies-
woman have much less change to become wealthy?)
 Labour ( task, working hours, wages- now 8 hour working day- before 12 hours a day,
6 days a week)
 standard of living, prosperity, well being

 f.ex. Aardappel eters- van Gogh- shows what they ate – medieval painting, where do the
clothes come from. – all economics.

,Economics

How-while having only limited (scare) resources at disposal- to satisfy unlimited needs and
want people have.


 What is produced?
 How is it produced?
 How is production divided among the population?

How to get as much sources as possible -medieval period, roman period – work harder
produce more- only limited time and land- not enough money.

Economics is the study of scarcity and the decision you make.  so what is produced?

How is it produced?  hand vs. machine (machinery changes production manners – less
people needed) so 

How is production divided among the population?
(limited amount of people production is still the case now a days, lot of people working for
us. Production is not divided evenly/ equally.

Micro level/ macro level

Economic method

 descriptive, but above all explanatory (why..? )
 positivism; objective knowledge is possible (method originating from natural
sciences) – general rules, with objectivity of economy.
 General laws – not interested in unique and individual cases (economy).
 General laws of higher prices lower consumption for example.
 Model based approach (model is simplification of reality) abstract but simple, want
to create general laws. Reality is very complicated- models simplify the world 
limited variables in these models, searching in the generals.
 Deductive method: using assumptions to come to conclusions.  conclusion using
general laws, with logical reasoning, so the outcome must be true. Problem is in th e
assumption (simplification of reality) – if they are not true to conclusion is not true

Economic assumption

Homo economicus:
 Everybody is rational
 Self-interested, only interested in own self and happiness. Happiness of your
child, child = happy  you =happy
 Unlimited materialistic wants and needs and limited resources

We need these assumption to come to conclusions.

,Ceteris paribus clause: all variable which are not included (exogenous) are assumed to be
constant (not change) but they do change  why many economic predictions are not right.
Very helpful  price increase – people buy less. Wages outside model (exogenous) increase
—people buy more due to more income. Breaks the economic law!

According to Adam smith (before industrial revolution);

In a free market, and invisible hand takes care of perfect coordination of supply and demand
(production and consumption)

What Is the invisible hand: price meganism – forces supply and demand to become equal.
Price to high – people don’t buy—less production—leads again to less supply and so higher
prices and thus less production.

Economic history is not based on history but on economic- birth of economic history

Methodenstriet
Second half of the 19th century;

Neoclassical economics (Marshall. Menger) view themselves as successors of the classical
economics (smith, Malthus, Ricardo)

Become very important in Second half of the 19th century

 Positivism (Objective knowledge)
 Deductive
 General laws
 Development of theoretical models

Historical school (list, Schmoller)

Influence of industrialization- higher production of agricultural products- higher position
than inferior industrialized countries. Why should we produce our self if we can get it for
cheaper in England. – want to protect own market but it goes against the free market theory
of Neoclassical economics. – so come up with..


 Historicism (knowledge is subjective)
 Inductive
 Searching for general patterns in the past
 General laws are bound to time and place
 Roots of economic history

(tariffs on trade, making foreign products more expensive so that people buy local
producst.)

, Winners -- Neoclassical economics!
Still very relevant now a days.

Traditional economic history

 Collecting information and facts
 Focus on the narrative (description) of historical events and developments.
 Explanations are often found outside the economy (culture, politics – bad economy-
must be because of bad culture. Dutch= Calvinism- save much, work hard can pay
ships- VOC) (1st half of 19th century- high investment in steam engines- good
economic reasons (wages, prices etc.) to not invest. – 1950 changes economic
reasons bettered and investment became more popular)
 No model based approach
 Numbers are usually only used as an illustration of the story.

Economic history was to descriptive and definitions were problematic.

Neoclassical perspective on economics (1)

 ‘Market’ works perfectly. Supply and demand adjust via price mechanism resulting in
an optimal equilibrium (no government intervention is best)
 All actors only focus on self-interest  profit maximization for forms and
maximization or utility/benefits for consumers.
 Unemployment leads through a lowering of wages , to an increasing for labour
(under the condition of a flexible labour market)


Neoclassical perspective on economics (2)

 When the economy slows down, the price-level decreases due to a surplus of supply,
and consequently the quantity of the goods demanded increase again; movement to
equilibrium.
 An economic crisis will ‘solve’ itself if you do not intervene in the market (laissez
faire)
 The most important function of the government is the protection of public order,
property rights, and contracts (providing a reliable well-functioning legal system)

Neoclassics I

 Free market Only the 'best' (most productive/efficient) firms survive providing the
lowest possible prices [NB: Not in the case of guilds or traditional succession].
Darwinian "survival of the fittest process".  The costs are low and the production is
high in an economy
 Survival of the strongest – best firms will survive
 Competition is good- best firms will survive.
 The cost are low and the production is high in an economy

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