Labour Productivity and human capital in the maritime sector of the North Atlantic, c. 1672-1815

Pre-modern growth was to a large extent dependent on processes of commercialization and specialization, based on cheap transport. Seminal interpretations of the process of economic growth before the Industrial Revolution have pointed to the strategic importance of the rise of the Atlantic economy an...

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Main Authors: Jelle van Lottum, Jan Luiten van Zanden
Format: Report
Language:unknown
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Online Access:http://www.cgeh.nl/sites/default/files/WorkingPapers/CGEH.WP_.No22.VanLottum%26vanZanden.pdf
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spelling ftrepec:oai:RePEc:ucg:wpaper:0022 2023-05-15T17:34:01+02:00 Labour Productivity and human capital in the maritime sector of the North Atlantic, c. 1672-1815 Jelle van Lottum Jan Luiten van Zanden http://www.cgeh.nl/sites/default/files/WorkingPapers/CGEH.WP_.No22.VanLottum%26vanZanden.pdf unknown http://www.cgeh.nl/sites/default/files/WorkingPapers/CGEH.WP_.No22.VanLottum%26vanZanden.pdf preprint ftrepec 2020-12-04T13:33:39Z Pre-modern growth was to a large extent dependent on processes of commercialization and specialization, based on cheap transport. Seminal interpretations of the process of economic growth before the Industrial Revolution have pointed to the strategic importance of the rise of the Atlantic economy and the growth of cities linked to this but have not really explained why Europeans were so efficient in organizing large international networks of shipping and trade. Most studies concerning early modern shipping have focused on changes in shipdesign in explaining long-term performance of European shipping in the pre-1800 period. In this paper we argue that this is only part of the explanation. Human capital – the quality of the labour force employed on ships – mattered as well. We firstly demonstrate that levels of human capital on board European ships were very high, much higher than the average for the countries from which the crew was recruited, and secondly that there were close links between the level of labour productivity in shipping and the quality of the workforce. This suggests strongly that shipping was a ‘high tech’ industry not only employing high quality capital goods, but also, as a complementary input, high quality labour, which was required to operate the increasingly complex ships and their equipment. Human Capital, Shipping, Early Modern Period Report North Atlantic RePEc (Research Papers in Economics)
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collection RePEc (Research Papers in Economics)
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language unknown
description Pre-modern growth was to a large extent dependent on processes of commercialization and specialization, based on cheap transport. Seminal interpretations of the process of economic growth before the Industrial Revolution have pointed to the strategic importance of the rise of the Atlantic economy and the growth of cities linked to this but have not really explained why Europeans were so efficient in organizing large international networks of shipping and trade. Most studies concerning early modern shipping have focused on changes in shipdesign in explaining long-term performance of European shipping in the pre-1800 period. In this paper we argue that this is only part of the explanation. Human capital – the quality of the labour force employed on ships – mattered as well. We firstly demonstrate that levels of human capital on board European ships were very high, much higher than the average for the countries from which the crew was recruited, and secondly that there were close links between the level of labour productivity in shipping and the quality of the workforce. This suggests strongly that shipping was a ‘high tech’ industry not only employing high quality capital goods, but also, as a complementary input, high quality labour, which was required to operate the increasingly complex ships and their equipment. Human Capital, Shipping, Early Modern Period
format Report
author Jelle van Lottum
Jan Luiten van Zanden
spellingShingle Jelle van Lottum
Jan Luiten van Zanden
Labour Productivity and human capital in the maritime sector of the North Atlantic, c. 1672-1815
author_facet Jelle van Lottum
Jan Luiten van Zanden
author_sort Jelle van Lottum
title Labour Productivity and human capital in the maritime sector of the North Atlantic, c. 1672-1815
title_short Labour Productivity and human capital in the maritime sector of the North Atlantic, c. 1672-1815
title_full Labour Productivity and human capital in the maritime sector of the North Atlantic, c. 1672-1815
title_fullStr Labour Productivity and human capital in the maritime sector of the North Atlantic, c. 1672-1815
title_full_unstemmed Labour Productivity and human capital in the maritime sector of the North Atlantic, c. 1672-1815
title_sort labour productivity and human capital in the maritime sector of the north atlantic, c. 1672-1815
url http://www.cgeh.nl/sites/default/files/WorkingPapers/CGEH.WP_.No22.VanLottum%26vanZanden.pdf
genre North Atlantic
genre_facet North Atlantic
op_relation http://www.cgeh.nl/sites/default/files/WorkingPapers/CGEH.WP_.No22.VanLottum%26vanZanden.pdf
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