Google AI seems to have difficulty using Google. The search was for "Washington Post 25 best musicals of the 21st century."
This is a blog about economics, history, law and other things that interest me.
Google AI seems to have difficulty using Google. The search was for "Washington Post 25 best musicals of the 21st century."
I'm reading Laura Edwards recent paper on "Trunks, Legal Texts, and the Materiality of Law in the Nineteenth Century." The Journal of the Civil War Era 15, no. 2 (2025): 157-183. The paper examines the ways in which trunks enabled people, including married women and enslaved people, to make claims to ownership even when legal texts did not seem to support those claims.
The paper reminded me of an advertisement in the Virginia Herald that I ran across while doing some research on Fredericksburg in the 1820s.
What struck me about the ad was the line that he took with him "a variety of clothing and his books." I was struck by the fact that in fleeing slavery one of the things he chose to carry with him were books and by the fact that the slaveowner referred to them as "his books" when he could have just said "a variety of clothing and books."
I wish I knew more of this story. Of course there is the big question of what happened to Billy, but would also love to know what books he took with him.
Sean Kenny has a new episode of The Economic History Podcast with Robert Allen.
Prof. Robert Allen discusses how the desert environment led to a unique economic structure-"from the sand up". Bob takes us through the economic implication of communal lands and describes the differences between the nomadic (Bedouin) and oasis economies. He suggests that religious structures were convenient in eventually consolidating various regions/tribes in the form of states. We also consider the incentives for a unique type of slavery, that arose from the nature of date farming/pearl diving in contrast to the Caribbean sugar plantation experience.
They also talk about how Allen go into economic history and his advice on doing economic history.
New NBER working paper today
Firewood in the
American Economy: 1700 to 2010.
Nicholas Z. Muller
Despite the central role of firewood in the development of
the early American economy, prices for this energy fuel are absent from
official government statistics and the scholarly literature. This paper
presents the most comprehensive dataset of firewood prices in the United States
compiled to date, encompassing over 6,000 price quotes from 1700 to 2010.
Between 1700 and 2010, real firewood prices increased by between 0.2% and 0.4%,
annually, and from 1800 to the Civil War, real prices increased especially rapidly,
between 0.7% and 1% per year. Rising firewood prices and falling coal prices
led to the transition to coal as the primary energy fuel. Between 1860 and
1890, the income elasticity for firewood switched from 0.5 to -0.5. Beginning
in the last decade of the 18th century, firewood output increased from about
18% of GDP to just under 30% of GDP in the 1830s. The value of firewood fell to
less than 5% of GDP by the 1880s. Prior estimates of firewood output in the
19th century significantly underestimated its value. Finally, incorporating the
new estimates of firewood output into agricultural production leads to higher
estimates of agricultural productivity growth prior to 1860 than previously
reported in the literature.
And if you haven’t already read it take a look at
Ron, Ariel. "When hay was king: Energy history and
economic nationalism in the nineteenth-century United States." The
American Historical Review 128, no. 1 (2023): 177-213.
Christine Exley graduated from UMW in 2009. She went on to earn a Ph. D. in economics from Stanford University. She taught for several years at Harvard Business School and is currently associate professor in the Department of Economics at the University of Michigan.
Christine has published extensively in the top journals in economics.
Examples of recent work include
The Gender Gap in Confidence: Expected But Not Accounted For
and
Nonprofits in Good Times and Bad
Sierra Latham graduated from UMW in 2009. Since then she has earned masters degrees as Georgetown University and University of Chicago, worked at the Urban Institute and for the City of Alexandria. She is currently a Senior Research Analyst at the Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond.
Here is some recent work she has done on
and