Economic Causes of Late-Nineteenth Century Agrarian Unrest:New Evidence
Robert A. McGuire
The Journal of Economic History, 1981, vol. 41, issue 4, 835-852
Abstract:
Several economic historians have suggested that economic instability in American agriculture was a primary cause of agrarian discontent during the late nineteenth century. This paper, in providing a rigorous analysis of the issue, presents estimates of economic instability in agriculture and evidence on the location and intensity of agrarian unrest for 14 northern states from 1866 to 1909. I statistically test for a relationship between the two. The results strongly suggest that late-nineteenth century agrarian unrest was directly related to a state's degree ofeconomic instability. This conclusion holds for the entire last third of the century and for several subperiods.
Date: 1981
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:cup:jechis:v:41:y:1981:i:04:p:835-852_04
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