Acemoglu, D. (1998) Why Do New Technologies Complement Skills? Directed Technical Change and Wage Inequality. The Quarterly Journal of Economics, 113, 4, 1055-1089 Acemoglu, D., Johnson, S. and Robinson, J. (2001) The colonial origins of comparative development: an empirical investigation, American Economic Review. 91, 5, 1369–1401.
Acemoglu, D. (2002) Directed Technical Change. Review of Economic Studies, 69, 4, 781– 809.
Allen, R. (2001) The Great Divergence in European Wages and Prices from the Middle Ages to the First World War. Explorations in Economic History, Vol. 38, October, 2001, pp 411447.
Allen, R. (2009) The British Industrial Revolution in Global Perspective. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2009.
- Allen, R. (2009b) Engels’ pause: Technical change, capital accumulation, and inequality in the British industrial revolution. Explorations in Economic History, 46, 4, 418 – 435.
Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
Allen, R. (2012) Backward into the future: The shift to coal and implications for the next energy transition. Energy Policy, 50, 17-23.
- Allen, R. and Weisdorf, J. (2010) The working year of English day labourer, c. 1300 – 1830.
Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
Broadberry, S., Campbell, B. and van Leeuwen, B. (2013) When did Britain industrialise? The sectoral distribution of the labour force and labour productivity in Britain, 1381–1851.
Cameron, G. (1996) Innovation and Economic Growth. London School of Economics Discussion Paper No. 277. Available at: http://eprints.lse.ac.uk/20685/1/Innovation_and_Economic_Growth.pdf Clark, G. (1998) Land Hunger: Land as a commodity and as a status good, England, 15001910. Explorations in Economic History, 35, 59-82.
- Clark, G. (2003) The Great Escape: The Industrial Revolution in Theory and in History.
Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
- Clark, G. (2010) The macroeconomic aggregates for England, 1209–2008, in Alexander J.
Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
Clark, G. and Jacks, D. (2007) Coal and the industrial revolution. European Review of Economic History, 11, 1, 39–72.
Crafts, N. (2002) Productivity Growth in the Industrial Revolution: A New Growth Accounting Perspective. London School of Economics. Available at: http://www.frbsf.org/economicresearch /files/crafts.pdf Crafts, N. (2004) Steam as a general purpose technology. The Economic Journal, 114, 495 338351.
Crafts, N. and Harley, C. (1992) Output growth and the British industrial revolution: A restatement of Crafts-Harley view. Economic History Reviews, 45, 4, 703-730.
Crafts, N. and Harley, C. (2000) Simulating the two views of the industrial revolution. Journal of Economic History, 60, 3, 819–841.
de La Grandville, O. (2009) Economic Growth: A unified approach. Oxford University Press de Pleijt, A. (2015) Human capital and long run economic growth: Evidence from the stock of human capital in England, 1300-1900. Working Paper Series No 229. University of Warwick.
Devine, D. (1983) From shafts to wires: historical perspective on electriï¬cation. Journal of Economic History, 2, 347–372.
Explorations in Economic History, 50, 16-27 Broadberry, S.N. Campbell, B., Klein, A., Overton, M. and van Leeuwen, B. (2015) British Economic Growth, 1270-1870. Cambridge University Press. Cambridge.
- Field ed. Research in Economic History, Vol. 27, Emerald Group Publishing Limited, 51 - 140 Crafts, N. (1985) British economic growth during the Industrial Revolution. Oxford University Press.
Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
Fouquet, R. (2008) Heat, Power and Light: Revolutions in Energy Services. Edward Elgar Publications, Cheltenham, UK and Northampton MA, USA.
Fouquet, R. (2010). The slow search for solutions: Lessons from historical energy transitions by sector and service. Energy Policy, 38(11), 6586–6596.
Fouquet, R. (2011) Divergences in long run trends in the prices of energy and energy services. Review of Environmental Economics and Policy, 5, 2, 196–218.
Fouquet, R. (2014). Long-run demand for energy services: Income and price elasticities over two hundred years. Review of Environmental Economics and Policy, 8(2), 186–207.
Fouquet, R. (2015) The allocation of energy resources in the very long run, Journal of Natural Resources Policy Research, 7:2-3, 147-156, DOI: 10.1080/19390459.2015.1050786 Fouquet, R. and Broadberry, S. (2015) Seven Centuries of European Economic Growth and Decline. Journal of Economic Perspectives 29, 4, 227-44.
Fouquet, R. and Pearson, P. (1998) A thousand years of energy use in the united kingdom. The Energy Journal, 19, 4, 1–41.
Fouquet, R. and Pearson, P. (2012) The long run demand for lighting: elasticities and rebound effects in different phases of economic development. Economics of Energy and Environmental Policy 1, 1, 83-100.
Galor, O. and D. N. Weil (2000) Population, technology and growth: From Malthusian regime to the demographic transition, American Economic Review 90, 4, 806-828.
- Griffin, E. (2010) A Short History of The British Industrial Revolution. Palgrave Macmillan: Baskingstoke, UK.
Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
- Habakkuk, J. (1962) American and British Technology in the Nineteenth Century. London: Cambridge Univ. Press.
Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
Hall, B, Jaffe, A. and Trajtenberg, M. (2001) The NBER Patent Citations Data File: Lessons, Insights, and Methodological Tools. NBER Working Paper No. 8498. Available at: http://www.nber.org/papers/w8498 Hammersley, G. (1973) The charcoal industry and its fuel 1540-1750. Economic History Review, 26, 593–613.
Hassler, J. Krusell, P. and Olovsson C. (2012) Energy-Saving Technical Change. NBER Working Paper No. Hicks, J (1932) The theory of wages, London: MacMillan.
- Jevons, W. (1865). The Coal Question: an inquity concerning the progress of the nation and the probable exhaustion of our coal mines, London.
Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
Jones, C. (2001) Was an Industrial Revolution inevitable? Economic growth over the very long run. Advances in Macroeconomics, 1, 1–43.
Kander, A. and Stern, D. (2014) Economic growth and the transition from traditional to modern energy in Sweden, Energy Economics, 46, 56-65 Kelly, M., Mokyr, J. and O Grada, C. (2014) Precocious Albion: A New Interpretation of the British Industrial Revolution. Annual Review of Economics, 6, 363-389 King, P. (2011) The choice of fuel in the eighteenth century iron industry: the Coalbrookdale accounts reconsidered. The Economic History Review, 64, 1, 132-156.
Kander, A., Malanima, P. and Warde, P. (2013) Power to the People, Energy in Europe over the last five centuries. Princeton University Press, Princeton.
- Lucas, R. (2002) The industrial revolution: past and future, in R. E. Lucas, Lectures on Economic Growth, Harvard University Press, Cambridge MA, 109-188.
Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
Madsen, J. B., Ang, J. and Banerjee R. (2010) Four centuries of British economic growth: the roles of technology and population, Journal of Economic Growth.
Meisenzahl, R. and Mokyr, J. (2012) The Rate and Direction of Invention in the British Industrial Revolution: Incentives and Institutions. In J. Lerner, and S. Stern (Eds.), The Rate and Direction of Inventive Activity Revisited, chapter 9, pages 443–479. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. URL http://www.nber.org/chapters/c12364.pdf Mokyr, J. (1990) The Lever of Riches: Technological Creativity and Economic Progress, New York, Oxford University Press Mokyr, J. (1993) The British Industrial Revolution: An economic Perspective. Oxford, Westview Press Mokyr, J (2008) The Institutional Origins of the Industrial Revolution. In Elhanan Helpman, ed., Institutions and Economic Performance. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 64– 119.
- Mokyr, J. (2009) The Enlightened Economy: Britain and the Industrial Revolution 1700–1850.
Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
Moser, P. (2012) Innovation without Patents: Evidence from World’s Fairs. The Journal of Law and Economics, 55, 1. 43-74.
- Nordhaus, D. (1997). Do real output and real wage measures capture reality? The history of lighting suggests not. in T.F. Breshnahan and R. Gordon (eds.) The Economics of New Goods. Chicago: Chicago University Press.
Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
- Penguin: England Mokyr, J. (2009b) Intellectual Property Rights, the Industrial Revolution, and the beginnings of modern economic growth, American Economic Review Papers and Proceeding. 99, 2, 349– 355.
Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
Popp, D. (2002) Induced Innovation and Energy Prices. American Economic Review, 92, 1, 160–180.
- Rothbarth, E. (1946) Causes of superior efficiency of USA industry as compared with British Industy, The Economic Journal, 56, 383 – 90 Stern, D. and Kander, A. (2012) The Role of Energy in the Industrial Revolution and Modern Economic Growth. The Energy Journal, 33, 3, 125-152.
Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
Stokey, N. (2001) A quantitative model of the British industrial revolution, 1780-1850. Carnegie-Rochester Conference Series on Public Policy, 55, 55-109.
Thomas, R and Dimsdale, N. (2017) A Millennium of UK Data, Bank of England OBRA dataset, http://www.bankofengland.co.uk/research/Pages/onebank/threecenturies.aspx Voigtlander, N., and Voth, H.- J. (2006) Why England? Demographic factors, structural change, and physical capital accumulation during the Industrial Revolution. Journal of Economic Growth, 11, 319–361.
University of California, Davies. Available at: http://faculty.econ.ucdavis.edu/faculty/gclark/papers/IR2003.pdf Clark, G. (2007) The Long March of History: Farm Wages, Population, and Economic Growth, England 1209-1869. Economic History Review, Vol. 60, No. 1, pp. 97-135.
- University of Oxford Working Paper. Available at: http://graduateinstitute.ch/files/live/sites/iheid/files/sites/international_history_politics/users/s tefano_ugolini/public/papers/Weisdorf.pdf Allen, R. (2011) Why the industrial revolution was British: commerce, induced invention, and the scientific revolution. Economic History Review, 64, 2, 357 – 384.
Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
- Von Tunzelmann, N. (1994) Technology in the Early Nineteenth Century. In Floud, R. and McCloskey, D. eds., The Economic History of Britain since 1700. 2nd ed., Vol.1. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 271–99.
Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
Voth, H.-J. (2003) Living Standards during the Industrial Revolution: An Economist's Guide. American Economic Review vol. 93, pp. 221-226.
Wrigley, E. (2010) Energy and the English Industrial Revolution. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.