消费者革命的代价:阿姆斯特丹的价格、物质生活水平与真实不平等(1630-1805)

The cost of the consumer revolution: Prices, material living standards, and real inequality in Amsterdam (1630‒1805)

Economic History Review · 2025
被引 0
ABS 4

中文导读

通过分析阿姆斯特丹的产品创新和价格数据,发现17世纪中产阶级生活成本下降,但18世纪工人阶层物质生活恶化,消费革命加剧了物质不平等。

Abstract

Abstract This article measures the cost of the early modern consumer revolution through a quantitative analysis of product and process innovations in Amsterdam and examines their variegated social impact in two distinct datasets of probate inventories. It demonstrates that middle‐class decencies became substantially cheaper during the seventeenth century, nuancing the industrious revolution hypothesis in urban settings, but we also find no sustained positive impact of rising consumption on the material living standards of the labouring masses. In the eighteenth century, in fact, first‐ and second‐hand prices diverged due to the combined effects of a supply glut, the accelerating turnover of fashion, and the inherent fragility of many novel consumer goods. While elite and middling households compensated for their indulgence in consumerism with prudent ‘investment’ in more durable possessions, thereby ensuring a transferable inheritance for the next generation, our analysis documents the material impoverishment of Amsterdam's working classes during the final decades of the ancien régime . The consumer revolution, we conclude, contributed to the eighteenth‐century rise of material – or ‘real’ – inequality between the shrinking middle classes of this preindustrial metropolis on the one hand and its growing numbers of impoverished inhabitants on the other.

经济史不平等生活水平消费革命价格分析