!Edward Said, Orientalism (New York: Vintage, 1979). H��W�r�F}gU���-��E/����NlG �u�����X�3.d�����E�>�U.A�L_N�>�ph3��ۅM�jdSz��~����̶۵��r�|ߵ\ۧ��1�r����k����D����k���&��k6m۶���%�t��Jl��O�gE �qb9^��r7�2�UU�uS�Z����H�Z�]�~��V�S]�Pç�ͫZ�O�N������d^oeI�Ju�׳���F��e/GD0s,�u=Z��KQˊ�&��A��X�3W�fӈ@O�.I��ؘoIP�WiSU��pG_��O]沚,��$6�C^�V�}0�M�C9q+���O�R���,��jj:j��\��q�]f���V��d*�J�^�Y��@>��I5mӱ]߾H�o������ >A���8H@�ij��nAá�.L��A��|�����.����Q7EFE�5=*}�-��]��[T�=1 Y�����B��P@������`�T|��}�?ҍ�ҵg�i�D�n������E��)�4�5Tr��#�:y����8��B�y�*���|κ\7LEg1T5�*���Ld���Am��I䳓2�k��~Ǎc��T����[����� ��Ĥ2��jk�P� v�)�Ϩ�����7���������T��;8�ҭ.DiJ[Pi7��Tɖ'U-�|�(��V��jӆ�jOW���tb �7�SYU�� ���RѺGQ�ގW���94nA��J%�BV��;y�]n\�QU� ħ�"U��U��q�n�9��4e�1Qr�]��FX�>3�#n�-r�ڰ�^�X� Research has focused on two indices – GDP per capita and real endobj Acrobat Distiller 6.0.1 for Macintosh 2! The Great Divergence in wealth between the West and the Rest, then, began with the Industrial Revolution and the advent of modern economic growth in Britain (Pomeranz, 2000).
This is my review of Kenneth Pomeranz, The Great Divergence
On the basis 160 0 obj endstream endobj In particular, a convincing story is needed for why North-South divergence occurred so dramatically during the late 19th Century, a good hundred years after the beginnings of the Industrial Revolution.
<>stream 95 0 obj the Great Divergence between Europe and Asia had its origins in the late medieval period and was already well under way in the early modern period, as in the traditional economic history literature, there was a great deal of regional diversity, as suggested by the California School. 94 0 obj 101 0 obj 100 0 obj uuid:387c31c6-c48e-11da-8a81-000a95986eb0 The Great Divergence By Timothy Noah Part One: Introducing the Great Divergence In 1915, a statistician at the University of Wisconsin named Willford I. <> To this end we construct a trade/growth model that includes application/pdf paper) 1. europe—economic conditions—18th century. 16 0 obj 2016-08-03T09:58:52-07:00
We construct the worlds centers of gravity for human population, GDP ’ 2 emissions byand CO taking the best out of five recognized data sources covering the last two centuries. <>/Font<>/ProcSet[/PDF/Text]>>/Rotate 0/Thumb 76 0 R/Type/Page>> Poor countries, on the other hand, have been slower to adopt modern methods. ! <> <>/Font<>>>/Fields[]>> <>/Font<>/ProcSet[/PDF/Text]>>/Rotate 0/Thumb 73 0 R/Type/Page>> 5 showing that Said engaged in his own Occidentalism, by reifying European discourse about the East. The Pomeranz hypothesis provoked a surge of quantitative research on comparative income levels. The immediate cause of the divergence is clear enough: the rich countries have invented and adopted technologies that have raised labour productivity enormously.