During the period often called the 'Great Escape' in Britain (roughly 1800-1865), sustained technological progress allowed real wages to finally increase, but this came at the cost of a stagnant or declining population as the country industrialized.
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Introduction to Microeconomics Course
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The Demographic Transition in Britain
Replication of the Malthusian Escape Beyond Britain
An economic historian is studying the country of 'Econland' and observes the following trends:
- Period A (1650-1750): The population grew from 5 million to 6 million, while the average real wage for a skilled worker decreased from 120 to 100 units of grain per year.
- Period B (1820-1900): The population surged from 8 million to 15 million, and the average real wage for a skilled worker simultaneously increased from 110 to 150 units of grain per year.
Which of the following statements best analyzes the fundamental economic shift between Period A and Period B for Econland?
Interpreting Historical Economic Data
Match the historical period of the English economy with the dominant relationship observed between population and real wages during that time.
Contrasting British Economic Regimes
A New Economic Regime
During the period often called the 'Great Escape' in Britain (roughly 1800-1865), sustained technological progress allowed real wages to finally increase, but this came at the cost of a stagnant or declining population as the country industrialized.
Arrange the following descriptions of major economic phases experienced by Britain into the correct chronological order, starting with the earliest.
Explaining a Historical Economic Shift
For centuries before 1800, Britain's economy followed a pattern where a growing population tended to suppress real wages, and higher wages often led to population growth that would eventually lower wages again. After 1800, a new trend emerged where both population and real wages increased together for a sustained period. Which statement best evaluates the fundamental significance of this new trend?
A historian examining economic data for a country from 1800 to 1865 observes that the population doubled while real wages for laborers showed a sustained, positive upward trend for the first time in centuries. The historian argues, 'The wage growth was not impressive enough to be considered a true economic breakthrough, as it was clearly constrained by the simultaneous population boom.' Based on the principles of the economic shift that occurred during this era, what is the most significant flaw in the historian's evaluation?