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First CEPR Economic History Symposium
Hosted by
Perugia
12-13 April 2013
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The following papers will be presented. Please see the Programme for further details.
The Mother of All Sudden Stops: Capital Flows and Reversals in Europe, 1919-1932
Olivier Accominotti, Barry Eichengreen
Not The Opium of The People:
Income and Secularization in a Panel of Prussian Counties
Sascha O. Becker, Ludger Woessmann
Accounting for the Great Divergence
Stephen Broadberry (London School of Economics), CAGE
Fiscal Policy in a Depressed Economy:
Was There a Free Lunch in 1930s Britain?
Nicholas Crafts(University of Warwick), Terence C. Mills(Loughborough University)
Feeling the blues
Moral hazard and debt dilution in Eurobonds before 1914
Rui Esteves (University of Oxford), Ali Coskun Tunçer (London School of Economics)
Climate, Ecosystem Resilience and the Slave Trade
James Fenskey, Namrata Kala
Brain Gain in the Age of Mass Migration
Francesco Giffoniyand, Matteo Gomellini
Shadowy Banks and Financial Contagion during the Great Depression
Kris James Mitchener (University of Warwick), NBER Gary Richardson (UC Irvine & NBE)
Waterloo: a Godsend for French Public Finances?
Kim Oosterlinck, Loredana Ureche-Rangau, Jacques-Marie Vaslin
Different Paths to the Modern State in Europe: The Interaction between Warfare,
Economic Structure and Political Regime
K. Kivanç Karaman (Department of Economics), Bogaziçi University, Istanbul and Sevket Pamuk
(Ataturk Institute for Modern Turkish History), Bogaziçi University and European Institute, (London School of Economics and Political Science)
Sovereigns Versus Banks:Credit, Crises, and Consequences
O` scar Jorda` (Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco and University of California, Davis),
Moritz Schularick (University of Bonn), Alan M. Taylor (University of Virginia, NBER, and CEPR)
Did Muhammad Ali Foster Industrilization In Early 19th Century Egypt?
Laura Panza, Jeffrey G Williamson
Selective Credit Policies and Economic Development in Post-WWII Italy
Federico Barbiellini Amidei, Alfredo Gigliobianco,Claire Giordano
The Italian Business Cycle from the Unification until Today:A Disaggregate Approach
Andrea Papadia (LSE Graduate Programme in Economic History),
Albrecht Ritschl (LSE and CEPR Economic History Department), Samad Sarferaz (ETH Zurich KOF Swis Economic Institute)
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