Jared Rubin is a professor of economics at Chapman University. He is an economic historian interested in the role that Islam and Christianity played in the long-run “reversal of fortunes” between the economies of the Middle East and Western Europe. His book, Rulers, Religion, and Riches: Why the West got Rich and the Middle East Did Not (Cambridge University Press, 2017), which addresses these issues, has won multiple book awards. For more information, visit his website, www.jaredcrubin.com.
Discussion paper
DP18501 Religion and Growth
Discussion paper
DP14894 Religion in Economic History: A Survey

VoxEU Column
The ideological roots of technological transformation: Meiji Japan versus Imperial China
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- Development & Growth 
- Economic history 
- Productivity and Innovation

VoxEU Column
Religion matters for economic growth through various channels
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- Development & Growth 
- Economic history

VoxEU Column
Spreading like wildfire: Luther’s network and the early Reformation
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- Economic history

VoxEU Column
Recent insights on the role of religion in economic history
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- Economic history

VoxEU Column
The financial power of the powerless: Evidence from Ottoman Istanbul
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- Economic history 
- Financial Markets