Industriousness and divergence: Living standards, housework and the Japanese diet in comparative historical perspective

0 ECONOMICS
Penelope Francks
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Abstract

Quantitative comparisons of living standards across Eurasia continue to conclude that the eastern side of the “great divergence,” including Japan, lagged behind the leading regions of Europe from early-modern times onwards. The “industrious revolution” model attributes this to the early spread in Europe of markets for labour and consumer goods. By contrast, in Japan, persistent household self-sufficiency must have precluded improvements driven by market participation. However, qualitative evidence on the history of the now globally renowned Japanese diet reveals how a different dietary pattern, involving continued household-based, non-market production activities, might nonetheless have generated improved living standards, even if these are invisible to quantitative assessment.

勤劳与分歧:比较历史视角下的生活水平、家务和日本饮食
对欧亚大陆生活水平的定量比较继续得出这样的结论:“大分化”的东部,包括日本,从近代早期开始就落后于欧洲的主要地区。“工业革命”模型将其归因于欧洲劳动力和消费品市场的早期扩张。相比之下,在日本,持续的家庭自给自足肯定阻碍了市场参与推动的改善。然而,关于如今享誉全球的日本饮食历史的定性证据表明,一种不同的饮食模式,包括持续的以家庭为基础的非市场生产活动,如何可能提高了生活水平,即使这些在定量评估中是看不见的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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