Book contents
- Shocking Contrasts
- Political Economy of Institutions and Decisions
- Shocking Contrasts
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Epigraph
- Contents
- Figures
- Maps
- Tables
- Preface and Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- 1 How Supply Shocks Arise and Why Political Responses to Them Vary
- 2 Who Adjusts to a Supply Shock and Who Resists It
- 3 Why a Technological Solution Does, or Does Not, Emerge
- 4 Exogenous Loss of Labor
- 5 Exogenous Gain of Labor: Railroads, Reproduction, and Revolution
- 6 Exogenous Loss of Land
- 7 Exogenous Increase of Human Capital
- 8 When the Endogenous Becomes Exogenous
- 9 Conclusion
- References
- Index
- Other books in the series (continued from page iii)
8 - When the Endogenous Becomes Exogenous
The Printing Press as a Fifteenth-Century Multiplier of Human Capital
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 09 June 2023
- Shocking Contrasts
- Political Economy of Institutions and Decisions
- Shocking Contrasts
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Epigraph
- Contents
- Figures
- Maps
- Tables
- Preface and Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- 1 How Supply Shocks Arise and Why Political Responses to Them Vary
- 2 Who Adjusts to a Supply Shock and Who Resists It
- 3 Why a Technological Solution Does, or Does Not, Emerge
- 4 Exogenous Loss of Labor
- 5 Exogenous Gain of Labor: Railroads, Reproduction, and Revolution
- 6 Exogenous Loss of Land
- 7 Exogenous Increase of Human Capital
- 8 When the Endogenous Becomes Exogenous
- 9 Conclusion
- References
- Index
- Other books in the series (continued from page iii)
Summary
The rising price of literature after the Black Death incentivized the invention of movable-type printing. An example of technological overshooting, the printing press turned an acute shortage of literature, and of human capital, into a sudden abundance. Cheaper literature encouraged wider literacy; new grammar schools and universities further multiplied human capital. That expansion sorely threatened the earlier Latinate elite, both clerical and secular, and led directly to the Reformation. Southern Catholic Europe invoked censorship; northern Protestant Europe censored only lightly. European publishing migrated northward. The divergent responses to printing are explained by: (a) the growth of Atlantic commerce and (b) the rise in Northern Europe of absolutist states. Both commerce and state-building required, and depended on, newly abundant human capital. In northern, Protestant Europe, rapidly multiplying human capital led to prosperity and technical progress; in southern, Catholic Europe, censorship constricted human capital and imposed persistent backwardness.
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- Information
- Shocking ContrastsPolitical Responses to Exogenous Supply Shocks, pp. 187 - 207Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2023