C Rei - Explorations in Economic History, 2011 - Elsevier
In the sixteenth century, European countries engaged in long-distance trade with the East.
Despite sharing the same objectives and technology, Portugal opted for a crown monopoly,
England, the Netherlands, and Sweden franchised trade to private merchants, whereas in ...
C Rei - 2009 - gradworks.umi.com
Abstract: The three chapters of this dissertation address the economics of merchant empires
from the fifteenth to the seventeenth centuries, when several European countries engaged in
long-distance trade with the Far East. Despite sharing the same objectives and having ...
C Rei - THE ECONOMIC HISTORY SOCIETY, 2007 - nber.org
Page 1. The Organization of Merchant Empires: A Case Study of Portugal and England
Cláudia Rei* Department of Economics Boston University e*mail: cr@bu.edu Draft
of February 28, 2007 (Preliminary and Incomplete) Abstract ...
[CITATION] The Role of Transportation Technology in Economic Leadership
C Rei - paper, Boston University, Department of Economics, 2002
C Rei - Cliometrica, 2011 - Springer
Abstract The Portuguese and Dutch merchant empires had a similar geographic distribution
with outposts all around the Indian Ocean, which they controlled and manned. Both empires
faced the same problem of monitoring their agents in remote corners of the world. Each, ...
C Rei - 2009 - apsun.ch
Abstract The different organizational structure of the Portuguese and Dutch merchant em%
pires affected their ability to monitor workers. I test the theoretical implications of these
differences using micro data of overseas workersjcompensation from the sixteenth to the ...
[CITATION] Ceteris Paribus
C Rei - Development, 1870
C Rei - 2008 - econ.upf.edu
Abstract In the sixteenth century, several European countries engaged in long'distance trade
with the Far East. Despite sharing the same transportation technology and objectives,
monarchs organized trade differently: the Portuguese opted for a crown monopoly ...
[CITATION] Rise and Fall of Technological Leadership: 1300–1900
C Rei - 2002
C Rei - 2011 - mpra.ub.uni-muenchen.de
The different organizational structure of the Portuguese and Dutch merchant empires
affected their ability to monitor workers. I test the theoretical implications of these differences
using micro data of overseas workers' compensation from the sixteenth to the eighteenth ...
C Rei - 2009 - eea-esem.com
Abstract In the sixteenth century, several European countries engaged in long'distance trade
with the East. Despite sharing the same objectives and technology, Portugal opted for a
crown monopoly whereas England and the Netherlands franchised trade to private ...
C Rei - Working Papers, 2011 - vanderbilt.edu
Abstract This paper focuses on the implications of organizational control on the race for
economic leadership across merchant empires. Poor organizational choices reduce
incentives to invest, which in turn stifle technological improvements and make leading ...
[CITATION] Market Structure Choice in Merchant Empires
C Rei - 2004
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