Image for Marketing sovereign promises  : monopoly brokerage and the growth of the English state

Marketing sovereign promises : monopoly brokerage and the growth of the English state

Part of the Political economy of institutions and decisions series
See all formats and editions

How did England, once a minor regional power, become a global hegemon between 1689 and 1815?

Why, over the same period, did she become the world's first industrial nation?

Gary W. Cox addresses these questions in Marketing Sovereign Promises.

The book examines two central issues: the origins of the great taxing power of the modern state and how that power is made compatible with economic growth.

Part I considers England's rise after the revolution of 1689, highlighting the establishment of annual budgets with shutdown reversions.

This core reform effected a great increase in per capita tax extraction.

Part II investigates the regional and global spread of British budgeting ideas.

Cox argues that states grew only if they addressed a central credibility problem afflicting the Ancien Régime - that rulers were legally entitled to spend public revenue however they deemed fit.

Read More
Special order line: only available to educational & business accounts. Sign In
£59.39 Save 10.00%
RRP £65.99
Product Details
Cambridge University Press
1107140625 / 9781107140622
Hardback
09/05/2016
United Kingdom
English
175 pages : illustrations (black and white).