create a website

Energy, knowledge and economic growth. (2014). Foster, John.
In: Journal of Evolutionary Economics.
RePEc:spr:joevec:v:24:y:2014:i:2:p:209-238.

Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

Cited: 6

Citations received by this document

Cites: 60

References cited by this document

Cocites: 26

Documents which have cited the same bibliography

Coauthors: 0

Authors who have wrote about the same topic

Citations

Citations received by this document

  1. Policy instruments and self-reported impacts of the adoption of energy saving technologies in the DACH region. (2022). Woerter, Martin ; Rammer, Christian ; Peneder, Michael ; Arvanitis, Spyros ; Worter, Martin ; Stucki, Tobias.
    In: Empirica.
    RePEc:kap:empiri:v:49:y:2022:i:2:d:10.1007_s10663-021-09517-6.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  2. Can fossil fuel endowments steer economic development? Evidence from the linkages approach. (2022). Ebeling, Francisco.
    In: Resources Policy.
    RePEc:eee:jrpoli:v:78:y:2022:i:c:s0301420722003439.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  3. In search of a suitable heuristic for evolutionary economics: from generalized Darwinism to economic self-organisation.. (2021). Foster, John.
    In: MPRA Paper.
    RePEc:pra:mprapa:106146.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  4. Competitiveness and Ecological Impacts of Green Energy Technologies. Firm-level Evidence for the DACH Region. (2017). Woerter, Martin ; Stucki, Tobias ; Rammer, Christian ; Peneder, Michael ; Arvanitis, Spyros ; Worter, Martin.
    In: WIFO Working Papers.
    RePEc:wfo:wpaper:y:2017:i:544.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  5. Prior Commitment and Uncertainty in Complex Economic Systems: Reinstating History in the Core of Economic Analysis. (2017). Foster, John.
    In: Scottish Journal of Political Economy.
    RePEc:bla:scotjp:v:64:y:2017:i:4:p:392-418.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  6. Trading Off Global Fuel Supply, CO2 Emissions and Sustainable Development. (2016). Wagner, Liam ; Foster, John ; Ross, Ian ; Hankamer, Ben.
    In: PLOS ONE.
    RePEc:plo:pone00:0149406.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

References

References cited by this document

  1. Acemoglu D, Robinson J (2012) Why nations fail: the origins of power, prosperity, and poverty. Crown Publishers, New York.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  2. Aghion P, Howitt P (1998) Endogenous growth theory. Mass, MIT Press, Cambridge.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  3. Allen RC (2008) A review of Gregory Clark’s a farewell to alms: a brief economic history of the world. J Econ Lit 46(4):946–973.

  4. Allen RC (2009) The british industrial revolution in global perspective. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.

  5. Arrow KJ (1962) The economic implications of learning by doing. Rev Econ Stud 29(3):155–173.

  6. Arthur WB (1994) Increasing returns and path dependence in the economy. University of Michigan Press, Ann Arbor.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  7. Ayres RU, Warr B (2009) The economic growth engine: how energy and work drive material prosperity. Edward Elgar, Cheltenham.

  8. Baumol WJ (2002) The free market innovation machine: analyzing the growth miracle of capitalism. Princeton University Press, Princeton.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  9. Boretos GP (2009) The future of the global economy. Technol Forecast Soc Chang 76(2009):316–326.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  10. Brown JH, Burnside WR, Davidson AD, DeLong JP, Dunn WC et al. (2011) Energetic limits to economic growth. BioScience 61:19–26.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  11. Chapman SD (1970) Fixed capital formation in the british cotton industry, 1770–1815. Econ Hist Rev 23(2):235–266.

  12. Crafts N (2005) The first industrial revolution: resolving the slow growth/rapid industrialization paradox. J Eur Econ Assoc 3(2–3):525–534.

  13. Davidson JEH, Hendry DF, Srba F, Yeo S (1978) Econometric modelling of the aggregate time series relationship between consumers’ expenditure and income in the UK. Econ J 88:661–92.

  14. Deane P (1969) The first industrial revolution. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  15. Denison EF (1974) Accounting for United States economic growth 1929-1969. The Brookings Institution, Washington D.C.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  16. Diamond J (2005) Collapse: how societies choose to fail or succeed. Viking Books, New York.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  17. Dixit AK, Pindyck RS (1994) Investment under uncertainty. Princeton University Press, Princeton.

  18. Dopfer K (1986) The histonomic approach to economics: beyond pure theory and pure experience. J Econ Issues XX(4):989–1010.

  19. Dopfer K (2006) The evolutionary foundations of economics. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.

  20. Dyke C (1990) Cities as dissipative structures. In: Weber B, Depew DJ, Smith JD (eds) Entropy, information, and evolution: new perspectives on physical and biological evolution. Mass.: MIT Press, Cambridge, pp 162–185.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  21. Field AJ (2011) A great leap forward: 1930s depression and U.S. economic growth. Yale University Press, New Haven.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  22. Fine B (2000) Endogenous growth theory: a critical assessment. Camb J Econ 24(2):245–265.

  23. Foster J (1987) Evolutionary macroeconomics. Unwin Hyman, London (Reproduced in the Routledge Revivals Series, 2011).
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  24. Foster J (2005) From simplistic to complex adaptive systems in economics. Camb J Econ 29:873–892.

  25. Foster J (2011a) Evolutionary macroeconomics: a research agenda. J Evol Econ Springer 21(1):5–28.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  26. Foster J (2011b) Energy, aesthetics and knowledge in complex economic systems. J Econ Behav Organ 80(1):88–100.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  27. Foster J, Metcalfe JS (2012) Economic emergence: an evolutionary economic perspective. J Econ Behav Organ Elsevier 82(2):420–432.

  28. Foster J, Wild P (1999a) Econometric modelling in the presence of evolutionary change. Camb J Econ 23:749–770.

  29. Foster J, Wild P (1999b) Detecting self-organisational change in economic processes exhibiting logistic growth. J Evol Econ 9:109–133.

  30. Fouquet R (2008) Heat power and light. Edward Elgar, Cheltenham.

  31. Fouquet R (2011) Divergences in long run trends in the prices of energy and energy services. Rev Environ Econ Policy 5(2):196–218.

  32. Freeman C, Louca F (2002) As time goes by: from the industrial revolutions to the information revolution. Oxford University Press, Oxford.

  33. Galor O, Michalopoulos S (2012) Evolution and the growth process: natural selection of entrepreneurial traits. J Econ Theory 147(2):756–777.

  34. Georgescu-Roegen N (1971) The entropy law and the economic process. Harvard University Press, Boston.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  35. Gordon RJ (2012) Is US growth over? Faltering innovation confronts the six headwinds. NBER Working Paper No. 18315, http://www.nber.org/papers/w18315.

  36. Harley CK (1982) British industrialization before 1841: evidence of slower growth during the industrial revolution. J Econ Hist 42(2):267–289.

  37. Harris JR (1967) The employment of steam power in the Eigtheenth Century. History 52(175):133–148.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  38. Howitt P, Aghion P (1998) Capital accumulation and innovation as complementary factors in long-run growth. J Econ Growth 3:111–130.

  39. Jevons WS (1866) The coal question. Macmillan, London.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  40. Landes DS (1998) The wealth and poverty of nations: why are some so rich and others so poor? W.W. Norton, New York.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  41. Maddison A (2008a) Statistics on world population, GDP and per capita GDP, 1–2006 AD. http://www.ggdc.net/maddison/.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  42. Maddison A (2008b) The west and the rest in the world economy: 1000–2030, Maddisonian and Malthusian interpretations. World Econ 9(4).
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  43. Madsen JB, Ang JB, Banerjee R (2010) Four centuries of British economic growth: the roles of technology and population. J Econ Growth 15:263–290.

  44. Matthews RCO (1959) The trade cycle. James Nisbet Ltd at, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  45. McCloskey D (2010) Bourgeois dignity: why economics can’t explain the modern world. University of Chicago Press.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  46. Metcalfe JS (2003) Industrial growth and the theory of retardation. precursors of an adaptive evolutionary theory of economic change. Revue économique, Presses de Sciences-Po 54(2):407–431.

  47. Miranda LCM, Lima CAS (2011) On the forecasting of the challenging world future scenarios. Technol Forecast Soc Chang 78:1445–1470.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  48. Mokyr J (2002) The gifts of athena: historical origins of the knowledge economy. Princeton University press, Princeton.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  49. Nelson R, Winter S (1982) An evolutionary theory of economic change. Mass.: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, Cambridge.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  50. Nunn N, Qian N (2011) The Potato’s contribution to population and urbanization: evidence from a historical experiment. Q J Econ 126:593–650.

  51. Perez (2002) Technological revolutions and financial capital. Edward Elgar, Cheltenham.

  52. Pittel K, Rübbelke D (2010) Energy supply and the sustainability of endogenous growth BC3 Working Paper Series (No.10, July) Basque Centre for Climate Change.

  53. Schneider ED, Kay JJ (1994) Life as a manifestation of the second law of thermodynamics. Math Comput Model 19:25–48.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  54. Schneider ED, Sagan D (2005) Into the cool: energy flow, thermodynamics and life. University of Chicago press, Chicago.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  55. Smil V (2008) Energy in nature and society: general energetics of complex systems. MIT Press.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  56. Solow RM (1957) Technical change and the aggregate production function. Rev Econ Stat 39(3):312–320.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  57. Solow RM (2007) The last 50 years in growth theory and the next 10. Oxford review of economic policy, vol 23(1) Oxford University Press, pp 3–14, Spring.

  58. Stern DI (2011) The role of energy in economic growth in ecological economic reviews. Robert Costanza, Karin Limburg & Ida Kubiszewski, Eds. Ann. N.Y. Acad. Sci. 1219:26–51.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  59. Tainter JA (1988) The collapse of complex societies. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.
    Paper not yet in RePEc: Add citation now
  60. Wrigley EA (2010) Energy and the english industrial revolution. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK.

Cocites

Documents in RePEc which have cited the same bibliography

  1. Can Autocracy Promote Literacy? Evidence from a Cultural Alignment Success Story. (2021). Palma, Nuno ; Reis, Jaime.
    In: Economics Discussion Paper Series.
    RePEc:man:sespap:1805.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  2. Can autocracy promote literacy? Evidence from a cultural alignment success story. (2021). Palma, Nuno ; Reis, Jaime.
    In: Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization.
    RePEc:eee:jeborg:v:186:y:2021:i:c:p:412-436.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  3. A History of Global Capitalism: Feuding Elites and Imperial Expansion. (2020). Bhattacharyya, Sambit.
    In: Working Paper Series.
    RePEc:sus:susewp:1020.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  4. Malthus Was Right: Explaining a Millennium of Stagnation. (2019). Robertson, Peter ; Madsen, Jakob ; Ye, Longfeng.
    In: Economics Discussion / Working Papers.
    RePEc:uwa:wpaper:19-16.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  5. Malthus was right: Explaining a millennium of stagnation. (2019). Robertson, Peter ; Madsen, Jakob ; Ye, Longfeng.
    In: European Economic Review.
    RePEc:eee:eecrev:v:118:y:2019:i:c:p:51-68.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  6. A Synthesis of the Lewis Development Model and Neoclassical Trade Models. (2018). Menzies, Gordon.
    In: Working Paper Series.
    RePEc:uts:ecowps:46.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  7. Can Autocracy Promote Literacy? Evidence from a Cultural Alignment Success Story. (2018). Palma, Nuno ; Reis, Jaime.
    In: Working Papers.
    RePEc:hes:wpaper:0127.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  8. Can autocracy promote literacy? evidence from a cultural alignment success story. (2018). Palma, Nuno ; Pedro, Nuno ; Reis, Jaime Brown.
    In: CEPR Discussion Papers.
    RePEc:cpr:ceprdp:12811.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  9. Property rights and the first great divergence: Europe 1500–1800. (2016). Karayalcin, Cem.
    In: International Review of Economics & Finance.
    RePEc:eee:reveco:v:42:y:2016:i:c:p:484-498.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  10. Economic growth in the Roman Mediterranean world: An early good-bye to Malthus?. (2016). Erdkamp, Paul.
    In: Explorations in Economic History.
    RePEc:eee:exehis:v:60:y:2016:i:c:p:1-20.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  11. Property Rights and The First Great Divergence: Europe 1500-1800. (2015). Karayalcin, Cem.
    In: Working Papers.
    RePEc:fiu:wpaper:1508.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  12. Energy, knowledge and economic growth. (2014). Foster, John.
    In: Journal of Evolutionary Economics.
    RePEc:spr:joevec:v:24:y:2014:i:2:p:209-238.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  13. Urbanization and Growth: Why Did the Splendor of the Italian Cities in the Sixteenth Century not Lead to Transition?. (2014). Marzano, Elisabetta ; Chiarini, Bruno.
    In: CESifo Working Paper Series.
    RePEc:ces:ceswps:_5038.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  14. The Expansion of the Commercial Sector and the Child Quantity-Quality Transition in a Malthusian World. (2013). Tabata, Ken.
    In: Discussion Paper Series.
    RePEc:kgu:wpaper:105.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  15. 1381 and the Malthus delusion. (2013). Clark, Gregory.
    In: Explorations in Economic History.
    RePEc:eee:exehis:v:50:y:2013:i:1:p:4-15.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  16. The Role of Lactose Tolerance in Pre-Colonial Development. (2011). Cook, Justin.
    In: Departmental Working Papers.
    RePEc:lsu:lsuwpp:2011-12.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  17. Growth Miracles and Growth Debacles. (2011). Bhattacharyya, Sambit.
    In: Books.
    RePEc:elg:eebook:13609.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  18. The Evolution of Grain Policy Beyond Europe: Ottoman Grain Administration in the Late Eighteenth Century. (2011). Agir, Seven.
    In: Working Papers.
    RePEc:egc:wpaper:999.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  19. Cliometrics and technological change: a survey. (2010). Crafts, Nicholas.
    In: The European Journal of the History of Economic Thought.
    RePEc:taf:eujhet:v:17:y:2010:i:5:p:1127-1147.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  20. Poverty, Population, Inequality, and Development: the Historical Perspective. (2010). Chilosi, Alberto.
    In: MPRA Paper.
    RePEc:pra:mprapa:27761.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  21. The Surprising Wealth of Pre-industrial England. (2010). Smith, Brock ; Cummins, Joseph ; Clark, Gregory.
    In: MPRA Paper.
    RePEc:pra:mprapa:25468.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  22. The Consumer Revolution: Turning Point in Human History, or Statistical Artifact?. (2010). Clark, Gregory.
    In: MPRA Paper.
    RePEc:pra:mprapa:25467.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  23. 1381 and the Malthus Delusion. (2010). Clark, Gregory.
    In: MPRA Paper.
    RePEc:pra:mprapa:25466.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  24. Was Malthus right? The relationship between population and real wages in Italian history, 1320 to 1870. (2010). Chiarini, Bruno.
    In: Explorations in Economic History.
    RePEc:eee:exehis:v:47:y:2010:i:4:p:460-475.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  25. The Surprising Wealth of Pre-industrial England. (2010). Smith, Brock ; Cummins, Joseph ; Clark, Gregory.
    In: Working Papers.
    RePEc:cda:wpaper:139.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

  26. The Macroeconomic Aggregates for England, 1209-2008. (2009). Clark, Gregory.
    In: Working Papers.
    RePEc:cda:wpaper:295.

    Full description at Econpapers || Download paper

Coauthors

Authors registered in RePEc who have wrote about the same topic

Report date: 2025-09-23 22:38:57 || Missing content? Let us know

CitEc is a RePEc service, providing citation data for Economics since 2001. Last updated August, 3 2024. Contact: Jose Manuel Barrueco.