Boston University
Spring 2018
M 5-7:45pm
Professor James Feigenbaum
jamesf@bu.edu
Economics 765 is the second course of the two-semester PhD sequence in economic history. The primary goal of the economic history sequence is to train graduate students to do serious research in economic history. We will read recent and classic papers in the field, talk about new ideas and questions, hunt for new old data, and learn empirical methods used in economic history research.
New old data has made a huge impact on economic history and many of the papers we will read this semester make use of new data. The cost of data collection has fallen and the availability of big data for historical research has grown. At the individual data, the complete count federal censuses, 1850 to 1940, allow us to observe the entire population, zooming in on people or locations of interest. The names revealed in the complete count and other sources enable us to (if we are careful) record link people from one historical source to another, creating new historical longitudinal data. Other researchers are turning maps and text into data. As you start thinking about your own future research in economic history, I hope you’ll be inspired or provoked by the work we read this semester.
Christophe Chamley takes over the second week after spring break.
We will plan to meet on Mondays from 5 to 7:45 in SSW 546. However, one Tuesday is a Monday (February 20). In addition, everyone probably has Wednesday 5 to 7:45 open on their schedules and if we need to reschedule a class, we will meet on Wednesday, same time, same place.
When your schedule allows it, attend the Economic History Lunch and Workshop at Harvard. Both are on Friday, the lunch is at 1pm (and includes lunch) and the seminar is at 2pm. The lunch will feature your peers, grad students from Harvard, MIT, BC, BU, and elsewhere presenting work in progress. The seminar invites economic history faculty from all over to present new work. Both are great opportunities to see early stage economic history research in action and you only have to cross the river once a week not twice to see them both. I’ll try to remember to pitch the week’s speakers during class as a reminder.
Subscribe to the NBER DAE working paper series (or the whole NBER WP weekly series). This is a great way to keep up with recent research: http://www.nber.org/new.html
Sign up for the EH.net mailing list: https://eh.net/mailing-lists/
Buy and read The Little Book of Research Writing: https://www.amazon.com/Little-Book-Research-Writing/dp/1974673162/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1514578713&sr=1-1. Research writing is hard but it isn’t impossible and the advice in this book is excellent. Let me put it this way: if I read your second year paper and you haven’t read this book, I will know.
January 22
Wage Structure and Inequality
Education
Recent Job Market Papers of the Week:
January 29
Immigration
Migration
Recent Job Market Paper of the Week:
February 5
Intergenerational Mobility
Intergenerational Mobility and Welfare
Future Job Market Papers of the Week:
February 12
Health
Crime
Recent Job Market Papers of the Week:
February 20 This is a Tuesday
Marriage
Fertility
Recent Job Market Paper of the Week
February 26
Women in the Labor Force
Child Labor
Recent Job Market Paper of the Week
March 12 The Monday after Spring Break
The Voting Rights Act (and before)
Trade
Recent Job Market Paper of the Week
This class won’t happen, but I felt really guilty about writing an economic history syllabus without a Great Depression section. Consider this a reading list for Summer 2018.
The Great Depression, macro-ish
The Great Depression, labor markets
The Great Depression, now with identification
Recovery and The New Deal