Banks, Financial Markets, and Industrial Development: Lessons from the Economic Histories of Brazil and Mexico
暂无分享,去创建一个
[1] Kenneth L. Sokoloff,et al. Was the transition from the artisanal shop to the nonmechanized factory associated with gains in efficiency?: Evidence from the U.S. Manufacturing censuses of 1820 and 1850 , 1984 .
[2] Wilson Suzigan,et al. História monetária do Brasil : análise da política, comportamento e instituições monetárias , 1977 .
[3] DID J. P. MORGAN’S MEN ADD VALUE? , 1990 .
[4] S. Haber. The Efficiency Consequences of Institutional Change: Financial Market Regulation and Industrial Productivity Growth in Brazil, 1866-1934 , 1996 .
[5] Zvi Griliches,et al. Economies of scale and the form of the production function;: An econometric study of Norwegian manufacturing establishment data , 1971 .
[6] Holland Hunter,et al. Economic Backwardness in Historical Perspective , 1963 .
[7] G. Mathewson,et al. Unlimited Liability as a Barrier to Entry , 1988, Journal of Political Economy.
[8] Allen M. Parkman,et al. Spatial Monopoly, Non-Zero Profits and Entry Deterrence: The Case of Cement , 1983 .
[9] C. I. Jones,et al. Productivity across industries and countries : time series theory and evidence , 1996 .
[10] L. Davis,et al. The New England Textile Industry, 1825–60: Trends and Fluctuations , 1966 .
[11] Robert B. Sutcliffe,et al. Industry and underdevelopment , 1971 .
[12] S. Haber,et al. Institutional Change and Economic Growth: Banks, Financial Markets, and Mexican Industrialization, 1878-1913 , 2002 .
[13] John H. Coatsworth. Obstacles to Economic Growth in Nineteenth-Century Mexico , 1978 .
[14] J. Brander,et al. Moral Hazard and Limited Liability: Implications for the Theory of the Firm , 1989 .