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Jeffrey G. Williamson

Economic historian From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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Jeffrey Gale Williamson (born 26 November 1935[1][2]) is the Laird Bell Professor of Economics (Emeritus), Harvard University; an Honorary Fellow in the Department of Economics at the University of Wisconsin (Madison); Research Associate at the National Bureau of Economic Research; and Research Fellow for the Center for Economic and Policy Research. He also served (1994–1995) as the president of the Economic History Association. His research focus is and has been on comparative economic history and the history of the international economy and development.[3][4] Economist Hilary Williamson Hoynes is his daughter.[5]

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Selected publications

  • 1974, Late Nineteenth-Century American Development: A General Equilibrium History. Cambridge University Press.[6]
  • 1974, with Allen C. Kelley, Lessons From Japanese Development: An Analytical Economic History. University of Chicago Press.[7]
  • with T. Hatton, 1998, The Age of Mass Migration, Oxford
  • with P. Aghion, 1998, Growth, Inequality, and Globalization, Mattioli Lectures: Cambridge
  • with K. O'Rourke, 1999, Globalization and History, MIT
  • with M. Bordo and A. M. Taylor, 2003, Globalization in Historical Perspective, Chicago and NBER
  • with Timothy J. Hatton, 2005, Global Migration and the World Economy. Two Centuries of Policy and Performance, The MIT Press.
  • 2011, Trade and Poverty: When the Third World Fell Behind. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
  • with Peter H. Lindert, 2016, Unequal Gains: American Growth and Inequality since 1700. Princeton University Press.
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Festschrift

T.J. Hatton. K. H. O'Rourke and A. M. Taylor (eds.), The New Comparative Economic History: Essays in Honor of Jeffrey G. Williamson, Cambridge Mass: MIT Press, 2007)

References

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