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Resource and output trends in the United States since 1870

TLDR
In this paper, a very brief treatment of three questions relating to the history of our economic growth since the Civil War is given, namely: (1) How large has been the net increase of aggregate output per capita, and to what extent has this increase been obtained as a result of greater labor or capital input on the one hand and of a rise in productivity on the other? (2) Is there evidence of retardation, or conceivably acceleration, in the growth of per capita output? (3) Have there been fluctuations in the rate of growth of output, apart
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Poverty, growth, and inequality over the next 50 years.

TL;DR: In the last two centuries, global poverty has been falling dramatically and the fall has intensified in recent decades, raising hope that it could be eliminated within the next 50 years.
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The Golden Age of European growth: A review essay

TL;DR: The authors surveys recent scholarship on the economic growth of Europe during its Golden Age, 1950-73, as represented by three recent collections of essays, and suggests that insights from new growth theory are limited and that the end of the Golden Age may have been brought about by the'shock' of restrictive monetary policies used to combat inflation after the oil crises of the 1970s.
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Causal Influences on Productivity Performance 1820–1992: A Global Perspective

TL;DR: This article used a comparative quantitative framework to demonstrate the pace of economic growth in different parts of the world economy since 1820, and identified the major causes which have been operative, and analyzed the different approaches which economists have developed to interpret proximate growth causality.
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On evolutionary technological change and economic growth: Lakatos as a starting point for appraisal

TL;DR: De Marchi and Blaug as discussed by the authors proposed a discussion on evolutionary technological change and economic growth theory, using the Lakatosian Methodology of Scientific Research Programmes as an appraisal criterion.