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Date: | Thu, 8 Sep 2005 17:42:12 -0400 |
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Measuring wealth through documentary records is certainly more reliable than
relying on artifact inventories, but has it's own peculiarities. A pass
through the regional economic history literature could be helpful to provide
an overview. I did an analysis of the pathways through which consumer
artifacts pass in pre- and post-revolutionary Virginia, and there is great
variation in those source paths, which is likely to be reflected in
variation in consumer prices. The market area -- number of choices the
consumer has to obtain hard goods -- is probably one of the bigger factors,
as well as the annual income cycle represented by the type of crops (for
agricultural populations) and the scheduling of planting and harvest, and
therefore the scheduling of disposable income.
This paper was published in the Archaeological Society of Virginia's Volume
on Nineteenth Century Archaeology, available at the ASV website. These
factors changed rapidly, but at different rates in different parts of the
country, so a full grounding in local history is essential.
You have to think about whether you want to study the sociology and
economics of the past, or something else. In the former case, all data must
be fully utilized.
Tim Thompson
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