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・ Economic reconstruction
・ Economic geography
・ Economic Geography (journal)
・ Economic geography of the United Kingdom
・ Economic geology
・ Economic Geology (journal)
・ Economic Geyser Crater
・ Economic globalization
・ Economic graph
・ Economic Group
・ Economic Group (Estonia)
・ Economic Group (Saskatchewan)
・ Economic growth
・ Economic Growth and Regulatory Paperwork Reduction Act
・ Economic Growth and Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2001
Economic history
・ Economic History Association
・ Economic history of Africa
・ Economic history of Argentina
・ Economic history of Australia
・ Economic history of Birmingham
・ Economic history of Brazil
・ Economic history of Cambodia
・ Economic history of Canada
・ Economic history of Chile
・ Economic history of China
・ Economic history of China (1912–49)
・ Economic history of China (1949–present)
・ Economic history of China before 1912
・ Economic history of Colombia


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Economic history : ウィキペディア英語版
Economic history

Economic history is the study of economies or economic phenomena of the past. Analysis in economic history is undertaken using a combination of historical methods, statistical methods and the application of economic theory to historical situations and institutions. The topic includes financial and business history and overlaps with areas of social history such as demographic and labor history. The quantitative – in this case, econometric – study of economic history is also known as cliometrics.〔See, for example, "Cliometrics" by Robert Whaples in S. Durlauf and L. Blume (eds.), ''The New Palgrave Dictionary of Economics'', 2nd ed. (2008). (Abstract )〕
==Development as a separate field==

Treating economic history as a discrete academic discipline has been a contentious issue for many years. Academics at the London School of Economics and the University of Cambridge had numerous disputes over the separation of economics and economic history in the interwar era. Cambridge economists believed that pure economics involved a component of economic history and that the two were inseparably entangled. Those at the LSE believed that economic history warranted its own courses, research agenda and academic chair separated from mainstream economics.
In the initial period of the subject's development, the LSE position of separating economic history from economics won out. Many universities in the UK developed independent programmes in economic history rooted in the LSE model. Indeed, the Economic History Society had its inauguration at LSE in 1926 and the University of Cambridge eventually established its own economic history programme. However, the past twenty years have witnessed the widespread closure of these separate programmes in the UK and the integration of the discipline into either history or economics departments. Only the LSE retains a separate economic history department and stand-alone undergraduate and graduate programme in economic history. Cambridge, Glasgow, the LSE and Oxford together train the vast majority of economic historians coming through the British higher education system today.
Meanwhile, in the US, the field of economic history has in recent decades been largely subsumed into other fields of economics and is seen as a form of applied economics. As a consequence, there are no specialist economic history graduate programs at any universities anywhere in the country. Economic history remains as a special field component of regular economics or history PhD programs in universities including at University of California, Berkeley, Harvard University, Northwestern University and Yale University.

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