Cambridge University Press, 1989. — 1230 p. — ISBN: 0-521-22504-3
The eighth and final volume of The Cambridge Economic History of Europe is the third of a group of three that cover the economic history of the western world during and since the Industrial Revolution. The main theme of this volume is the role played in the growth of industrial economies by the development of economic and social policies. The volume also discusses these factors in detail for the principal economies, and includes detailed studies of France, Britain, Germany, the United States, Austria-Hungary, the countries of Eastern Europe, Russia, Sweden, and Japan.
List of figures page
List of tables
European trade policy, 1815—1914
Commercial policy between the wars
International financial policy and the gold standard, 1870-1914
The gold standard and national financial policies, 1913-39
Taxation and public finance: Britain, France, and Germany
State policy toward labour and labour organizations, 1830-1939: Anglo-American union movements
Labour and the state on the continent, 1800-1939
British public policy, 1776—1939
American economic policy, 1865-1939
Economic and social policy in France
German economic and social policy, 1815-1939
Economic policy and economic development in Austria-Hungary, 1867-1913
East-central and south-east Europe, 1919—39
Economic and social policy in the USSR, 1917—41
Economic and social policy in Sweden, 1850-1939
Aspects of economic and social policy in Japan, 1868—1945
Bibliographies
Volume 1Volume 2Volume 3Volume 4Volume 5Volume 6
Volume 7. Part 1Volume 7. Part 2