The winter 2016 issue of The
Journal of the Early Republic includes several papers from a conference
on Economic History’s Many Muses, held at the Library Company of Philadelphia.
The papers consider a wide array of topics
and approaches within history. Two were of particular interest to me as an
economist/economic historian: Caitlin Rosenthal and Stephen Mihm. Both authors have
been associated with the “new history of capitalism,” and both wrote essays
that explicitly address the relationship between economists who work on
historical issues and historians who work on economic issues. Rosenthal argues
that both sides need to work to break down the barriers between the two. I agree.
I’m not sure that Mihm shares that goal.
His essay on financial history was the one most closely related to my work in
economic and business history, yet it presented a picture of the state of
economic history generally and financial history specifically that I found
largely unrecognizable.
The essence of Mihm’s argument was that
financial history has largely disappeared:
“Financial history, as well as economic
history more generally, was once a vital part of both the historical and
economics disciplines. And then it effectively vanished, save for a few
isolated individuals in the academy. Understanding how and why that happened
may help frame the challenges facing practitioners of the “history of
capitalism.” He argues that historians largely abandoned the field to economists
and that “the move to economics departments ended less happily than it began.
Increasingly, economic historians in economics departments served to
substantiate existing models and formulas, where historical inquiry was not
really the point. Economic historians found themselves marginalized.”
Yet when you actually look at some evidence
you are more likely to come to the conclusion that Ran
Abramitzky did, that “economic history is far from being marginalized and
overlooked by economists.” Abramitzky finds that “economic history today is
more respected and appreciated by the average economist is also reflected by an
increase in economic history publications in the top-5 economic journals. The
decline in economic history in the top-3 journals that McCloskey documented has
been reversed, and the percentage of economic history publications in the top-3
journals has gone back up to its heydays of the 1920s and 1930s, although QJE
has replaced the JPE as the most historical journal (Table 1). 4 Similarly, the
number and percentage of economic history papers published in the top 5
economic journals (AER, QJE, JPE, Econometrica, Restud) has doubled over the
last twenty years (Figure 1), in part, reflecting a broader trend in economics
away from theory and into empirical work.”
In short, the rumors of economic history’s demise
have been greatly exaggerated. There have been some setbacks. My own alma mater,
Washington University in St Louis, is one of the worst examples. On the other
hand, many highly regarded economics departments in the United States still have
multiple economic historians: Harvard (Eric Chaney, Melsissa Dell, Claudia
Goldin, and Nathan Nunn); Stanford (Avner Grief and Ran Abramitzky); Yale
(Naomi Lamoreaux, Tim Guinane, Jose Antonio Espin Sanchez); Northwestern, (Joel
Mokyr, Robert Gordon, Joe Ferrie); Berkeley (Barry Eichengreen, Brad De Long,
Martha Olney, Christina Romer); Michigan (Paul Rhode, Martha Bailey); Vanderbilt
(Peter Rousseau, William Collins, Claudia Rei, Andrew Goodman-Bacon); U.C.
Davis (Alan Taylor, Katherine Eriksson, Greg Clark, Chris Meissner); UCLA (Leah
Boustan, Michela Giorcella, Dora Costa, Walker Hanlon). Other departments, like
George Mason (John Nye, Noel Johnson, Mark Koyama, and Carlos Ramirez) have
built up very strong programs in economic history in recent years. And this is
just the United States. As best I can tell economic history seems to be thriving
in Europe as well. Moreover, several of the economic historians that I just
listed focus on financial issues, and Rutgers (Hugh Rockoff, Eugene White, and
Michael Bordo) practically has a financial history department.
Ironically, Mihm’s argument that financial
history all but vanished is most forcefully refuted by his own footnotes. He
cites numerous recent papers by Rockoff, Grubb, Wallis, Sylla, Bodenhorn,
Rousseau, Knodell, Calomiris, Schweikart, Lamoreaux, and Wright. Moreover, the
list could have been even longer. Mihm does not include references to important
recent work by economic historians like Eric Hilt and Matt
Jaremski. And this is only counting people who have written on early
America. The list is much longer if one turns to Europe or America after the
Civil War.
Mihm’s footnotes also seem at odds with his
text on specific issues. For example, when he acknowledges that economists have
given considerable attention to some topics, like “free banking,” he suggests
that “a significant portion of past scholarship by economists has been
motivated in order to produce a historical brief to support the abolition of
central banks or the deregulation of banking.” The term “free banking” seems to
conjure notions of some sort of financial equivalent of “free love.” Free
banking, however, did not mean that anything goes. Free banking de-politicized
bank chartering. It moved finance in the United States toward what North,
Wallis and Weingast describe as an open access order. It was not a world
without rules. It was a world in which everyone had to follow the same rules.
Everyone had to follow the same rules about capital requirements, specie
redemption, and security backed note issues. Ironically, although Mihm cites
numerous authors who have written on free banking (e.g., Rockoff, Rolnick and
Weber, and Economoupolous), he does not cite some more libertarian leaning
economists (Lawrence White and George Selgin) who have written on financial
history. His fellow NYU grad and University of Georgia colleague George Selgin,
who has written extensively on the money and banking, doesn’t get a single
mention.
Similarly, he claims that “Also
understudied are the ways that “bringing the state back in,” to use the famous
words of Theda Skocpol, requires a recognition of the central role public
finance played and its corresponding entanglements with private finance.” Yet
he cites a number of the papers by Sylla, Wallis, Lamoreaux, and others that do
exactly this.
Reading Mihm’s paper it is easy to see why
Cathy Matson, who organized the conference and introduces the papers, would
suggest that a “A new kind of financial history would retrieve the themes of tariffs,
taxation, and especially banking from the special preserve of economists. Its
historians would ask such questions as who underwrote banks, how was bank money
used, how was its value created, what was the extent of banking power at
different times in North American history, what are the links between banks and
slavery or the rise of wage labor?” In other words, this new financial history would
do what financial historians, both economists and historians, are already doing.