Classic Books in Business and Economic History

10 April 2007 at 10:15 pm 4 comments

| Peter Klein |

EH.Net’s Project 2000/2001 features new reviews of classic works in business and economic history. Here are some that may be of particular interest to O&M readers:

  • David Landes on Chandler’s The Visible Hand: The Managerial Revolution in American Business
  • Thomas McCraw on Schumpeter’s Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy
  • Paul Hohenberg on Landes’s The Unbound Prometheus: Technological Change and Industrial Development in Western Europe from 1750 to the Present
  • Albert Fishlow on Gerschenkron’s Economic Backwardness in Historical Perspective
  • Philip Coelho on North and Thomas’s The Rise of the Western World: A New Economic History

Entry filed under: - Klein -, Business/Economic History, Recommended Reading.

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4 Comments Add your own

  • 1. twofish's avatar twofish  |  11 April 2007 at 12:06 pm

    Just one note. Max Weber is not highly thought of among economists of China because he gets both Chinese religion and economics wrong. One idea that is becoming increasingly influential among Chinese historians is that China *did* have a commercial revolution in the 17th and 18th century, that China’s “backwardness” was a largely 19th/20th century event, and China’s current economic growth has some roots in its earlier flowering of capitalism.

    See

    http://www.hartford-hwp.com/archives/10/114.html

  • 2. twofish's avatar twofish  |  11 April 2007 at 12:12 pm

    Getting back to Austrian economics. One reason I like Austrian economics is its emphasis on chance, uncertainty, and of history being in constant flux.

    Historians of the 1920’s were trying to come up with reasons why China was “destined” to be an economic failure, and one thing that current historians of China are trying very hard not to do is to come up with theories of history that mark China’s current economic growth as “historically inevitable.” The term that you hear a lot is “path dependence” that where we are is often a result of random decisions and the outcome could be very different.

  • 3. Cliff Grammich's avatar Cliff Grammich  |  2 May 2007 at 10:29 pm

    Thanks for posting these. EH Net is on to a great idea here, which I don’t meant to disparage by two comments on the reviews–all of which I’ve enjoyed–below.

    First, I’m not quite sure that I agree with McCraw that “Schumpeter’s analysis of . . . democracy is a good deal less compelling than his dissection of capitalism.” Well, maybe it is–an economist can judge better than I just how compelling is his dissection of capitalism–but I’ve actually found his analysis of democracy, which I hadn’t found terribly compelling in my grad school days, more compelling since then. I’m not sure what that says about him or me. Maybe I’ve read one too many blogs (certainly not O&M or orgtheory!) where it does indeed seem that “the typ[ical citizen drops down to a lower level of mental performance . . . argu[ing] and analyz[ing] in a way which he would readily recognize as infantile within the sphere of his real interests.”

    Second, it might be interesting to see somebody take on Weber’s meatier full Sociology of Religion writings (Beacon published a version in ’93) rather than just The Protestant Ethic.

  • 4. Chirag Chamoli's avatar Chirag  |  28 January 2009 at 11:58 am

    Ahha this is indeed a nice list, as I am s new student. Thanks for sharing.

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