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Watersheds and Turning Points: Conjectures on the Long-Term Impact of Civil War Financing

Jeffrey G. Williamson

The Journal of Economic History, 1974, vol. 34, issue 3, 636-661

Abstract: What accounts for the “epochal” changes in capital formation shares and capital goods' prices during the 1860's? The pages following document an epochal rise in American gross saving rates centered on the Civil War decade. They also establish a symmetrical episodic shift in the relative price of manufactured durable investment goods. Not only did the American investment share in GNP rise dramatically (and permanently) between the 1850's and 1870's, but the relative price of capital goods declined sharply over the same period. This relative price change was pronounced and it was never again repeated in a subsequent century of development.

Date: 1974
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