Family standards of living over the long run, England 1280–1850

This article uses new wage series for men, women and children in combination with an established cost of living index and standard assumptions about family size to construct a measure of family welfare in England, 1280–1850. It asks whether this family could achieve a standard of living historically...

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Main Authors: Horrell, S, Humphries, J, Weisdorf, J
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Oxford University Press 2020
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author Horrell, S
Humphries, J
Weisdorf, J
author_facet Horrell, S
Humphries, J
Weisdorf, J
author_sort Horrell, S
collection OXFORD
description This article uses new wage series for men, women and children in combination with an established cost of living index and standard assumptions about family size to construct a measure of family welfare in England, 1280–1850. It asks whether this family could achieve a standard of living historically defined as ‘respectable’. It extracts information from primary and secondary sources to make adjustments for the participation rates of women and children, the varying number of days worked over time, the changing involvement of married women in paid work, and the evolving occupational structure. The resulting series is the first to depict the living standard of a representative working family over the very long run. Prior to the Black Death, this family existed just above subsistence; afterwards shortage of labour brought substantial albeit not unassailable gains. Tudor-era turmoil and constraints on women’s work pushed the family below the ‘respectable’ standard. From the mid 1600s however, the gradual transformation of the economy coincided with improved welfare. Over these centuries, it was rare for men’s work alone to sustain the family at a respectable level; women and children’s earnings were necessary. This article calls for a re-evaluation of the chronology, causes and consequences of long-run growth.
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spelling oxford-uuid:3b9afcb5-c769-4859-80f5-ebdc0026afc42024-12-12T17:19:52ZFamily standards of living over the long run, England 1280–1850Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:3b9afcb5-c769-4859-80f5-ebdc0026afc4EnglishSymplectic ElementsOxford University Press2020Horrell, SHumphries, JWeisdorf, JThis article uses new wage series for men, women and children in combination with an established cost of living index and standard assumptions about family size to construct a measure of family welfare in England, 1280–1850. It asks whether this family could achieve a standard of living historically defined as ‘respectable’. It extracts information from primary and secondary sources to make adjustments for the participation rates of women and children, the varying number of days worked over time, the changing involvement of married women in paid work, and the evolving occupational structure. The resulting series is the first to depict the living standard of a representative working family over the very long run. Prior to the Black Death, this family existed just above subsistence; afterwards shortage of labour brought substantial albeit not unassailable gains. Tudor-era turmoil and constraints on women’s work pushed the family below the ‘respectable’ standard. From the mid 1600s however, the gradual transformation of the economy coincided with improved welfare. Over these centuries, it was rare for men’s work alone to sustain the family at a respectable level; women and children’s earnings were necessary. This article calls for a re-evaluation of the chronology, causes and consequences of long-run growth.
spellingShingle Horrell, S
Humphries, J
Weisdorf, J
Family standards of living over the long run, England 1280–1850
title Family standards of living over the long run, England 1280–1850
title_full Family standards of living over the long run, England 1280–1850
title_fullStr Family standards of living over the long run, England 1280–1850
title_full_unstemmed Family standards of living over the long run, England 1280–1850
title_short Family standards of living over the long run, England 1280–1850
title_sort family standards of living over the long run england 1280 1850
work_keys_str_mv AT horrells familystandardsoflivingoverthelongrunengland12801850
AT humphriesj familystandardsoflivingoverthelongrunengland12801850
AT weisdorfj familystandardsoflivingoverthelongrunengland12801850