Women, children and the calculation of labour productivity in Europe and North America

Women, children and the calculation of labour productivity in Europe and North America

Show full item record

Title: Women, children and the calculation of labour productivity in Europe and North America
Author: Craig, Béatrice
Abstract: Economic historians have viewed increases in agricultural labour productivity as one of the key factors behind the shift from an agrarian to an industrial economy. It allowed rural regions to "release" workers for the factoy. Jan De Vries suggested that in the XVIIth and XVIIIth century, women and children may have been the workers whose productivity increased the most. This made women and children central agents in the process of economic transformation. However, calculating labour productivity is fraught with difficulties and the problems are worse in the case of women and children's productivity. Some of the assumptions underpinning the calculations of economic historians are more fragile when applied to women and children than to men. Economic historians have at times assumed that censuses provided reasonably accurate estimates of the size of the labour force; that the participation rates were uniform within the different categories, and that women and children were as free as men responded to the incentives of the market. All those proved false, and this should incite researchers to extreme caution.
Date: 2000
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10393/12888

Files in this item

Files Size Format View
Craig_Béatrice_ ... _calculation_of_labour.pdf 2.169Mb application/pdf View/Open

This item appears in the following Collection(s)

Show full item record


Contact information

Morisset Hall (map)
65 University Private
Ottawa ON Canada
K1N 6N5

Tel. 613-562-5800 (4563)
Fax 613-562-5195

ruor@uottawa.ca