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Article
Land Abundance, Interest-Profit Rates and Nineteenth Century American and British Technology
Economics
  • Alexander J. Field, Santa Clara University
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
6-1-1983
Publisher
Economic History Association / Cambridge University Press
Disciplines
Abstract

Virtually all sectors of the nineteenth-century American economy were less capital-intensive than their British counterparts. This resulted from persistently higher American interest/profit rates, due in turn to American land abundance. The paper adduces the evidence in support of these propositions, and explores their interrelationships through the use of a linear model inspired by the writings of David Ricardo.

Comments
Reprinted in in Peter Temin, ed. Industrialization in North America, vol. 6 1994 (Blackwell), pp. 483-510.
Citation Information
Field, Alexander J. 1983. "Land Abundance, Interest-Profit Rates and Nineteenth Century American and British Technology," Journal of Economic History 43 (June): 405-31.