- Stephen Broadberry and Bishnupriya Gupta, “The Historical Roots of India’s Service-Led Development: A Sectoral Analysis of Anglo-Indian Productivity Differences, 1870-2000”
- Rui Pedro Esteves and David Khoudour-Castéras, “A Fantastic Rain of Gold: European Migrants’ Remittances and Balance of Payments Adjustment during the Gold Standard Period”
- Gerben Bakker, “The Evolution of the Pharmaceutical Industry: Sunk Costs, Market Size and Market Structure, 1800-2000”
- John A. James, James McAndrews and David F. Weiman, “Panics and the Disruption of Private Payments Networks: The United States in 1893 and 1907”
- David Mitch, “High Stakes Educational Testing in Victorian England”
- J. Peter Ferderer, “Advances in Communication Technology and Growth of the American Over-the-Counter Markets, 1876-1929”
- Stefano Ugolini, “The Origins of Foreign Exchange Policy: A detailed analysis of the case of the National Bank of Belgium, 1851-1853”
- Maarten Bosker, Eltjo Buringh and Jan Luiten van Zanden, “From Baghdad to London – The dynamics of urban growth in Europe and the Arab world, 800-1800”
- Louis Cain and Sok Chul Hong, “Survival in 19th Century Cities: The Larger the City, the Smaller Your Chances”
- Les Oxley, “Inventiveness and Economic Growth on the Periphery: Patenting activity in New Zealand, 1871-1939.”
- Antonio Tena-Junguito, “Bairoch Revisited. Tariff Structure and Growth in the Late 19th Century.”
- Guillaume Daudin, “Domestic Trade and Market Size in Late Eighteenth Century France”
- Sibylle H. Lehmann and Kevin H. O’Rourke, “The structure of protection and growth in the late 19th century”
- Pierre-Cyrille Hautcoeur and David Le Bris, “A challenge to triumphant optimists? A new index for the Paris Stock-Exchange (1854-2007)”
- Jeff Frank and Andrew Seltzer, “Female Salaries and Careers in the British Banking Industry, 1915-41”
- Elise S. Brezis and Heeho Kim, “Efficiency of the Korean Slave Market – 1689-1890”
- Giovanni Federico and Ricardo Paixão, “Market power on the colonial frontier: São Paulo 1750-1850”
- Carsten Burhop, “Corporate Law and Underpricing of Initial Public Offerings: Evidence from Germany, 1870-1896”
- Sun Go, “Free Schools in America, 1850-1870: Who Voted for Them, Who Got Them, and Who Paid”
- B. Zorina Khan, “Premium inventions: Prizes and Patents among Great Inventors in Britain and the United States, 1750-1930”
- Marina Estelle Adshade, “Predicting Patterns of Early Twentieth Century Wage Inequality”
- Marta Felis-Rota, “Is Social Capital Persistent? Comparative Measurement in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries and its Synergies with Per Capita Income”
- Mark Dincecco, “The Political Economy of Financial Good Housekeeping in Historical Perspective”
- Olivier Accominotti, Marc Flandreau, Riad Rezzik and Frédéric Zumer, “Black Man’s Burden, Redux: On the Miscalculations of the British Empire, 1880-1913”
- Jean-Luc Demeulemeester and Claude Diebolt, “New Institutional History of the Adaptive Efficiency of Higher Education Systems – Lessons from the Prussian Engineering Education: 1806-1914”
- Esther Redmount, Arthur Snow and Ronald S. Warren, Jr., “The Effect of Wage-Payment Reform on Workers’ Labor Supply and Welfare”
- Eric Hilt, “Wall Street’s First Corporate Governance Crisis: The Conspiracy Trials of 1826”
- Steven Nafziger, “Democracy Under the Tsars? The Case of the Zemstvo”
- David S. Jacks, Christopher M. Meissner and Dennis Novy, “Trade Booms, Trade Busts, and Trade Costs”
- Petra Moser, “Why Don’t Inventors Patent?”
- Heather F. Howard, “Prepaid Passage and the Timing of Emigration”
- Alexander J Field, “Procyclical TFP and the Cyclicality of Growth in Output per Hour, 1890-2004”
- Caroline Fohlin, “Venture Capital Institutions in Post-War America: Political Influences on Geography and Organizational Change”
- William Troost, “Peer to Peer: Lifetime Learning and the Evolution of the Gender Literacy Gap”
- Donald J. Smythe, “Why Was the Uniform Sales Act Adopted in Some States but not Others?”
- Joyce Burnette, “Testing for Wage Discrimination in US Manufacturing in 1832”
- Christopher Kingston, “A Broker and his Network: Marine Insurance in Philadelphia during the French and Indian War, 1755-1759”
- Felipe Tâmega Fernandes, “Taxation and Welfare: the case of Rubber in the Brazilian Amazon (1870-1910)”
- Alexander Rathke, Tobias Straumann and Ulrich Woitek, “Reinventing Export-led Growth: Sweden in the 1930s”
- Jessica S. Bean and George R. Boyer, “The Trade Boards Act of 1909 and the Alleviation of Household Poverty”
- Brooks A. Kaiser, “Long run outcomes of conservation expenditures: Watershed destruction, rehabilitation and protection in Hawaii”
- Kris James Mitchener and Marc Weidenmier, “The Value of Silver in an Age of Gold”
- Marianne Hinds Wanamaker, “Slave Emancipation as a Natural Experiment in American Fertility”
- Saumitra Jha, “Shareholding, coalition formation and political development: evidence from 17th century England”
- John P. Tang, “The Role of Financial Conglomerates in Industrialization: Evidence from Meiji Japan, 1868-1912”
- Stacey Jones, “Teachers and Tipping Points: Historical Origins of the Teacher Quality Crisis”
- Vincent Bignon and Jérôme Sgard, “The two uses of bankruptcy law in 19th century France: dealing with the poor and restructuring capital”
- Peter C. Mancall, Joshua L. Rosenbloom and Thomas Weiss, “The Role of Exports in the Economy of Colonial North America: Estimates for the Middle Colonies”
- Gavin Wright, “Sharing the Prize: The Civil Rights Revolution and the Southern Economy”
- Alan Dye, “The New Deal and the “New Cuba”: Cuba’s Participation in the U.S. Sugar Quota Program, 1934-1941″
- Angela Redish and Warren E. Weber, “Coin Sizes and Payments in Commodity Money Systems”
- Dorothee Crayen and Joerg Baten, “Global Trends in Numeracy 1820-1949 and Its Implications for Long-Run Growth”
- Melinda Miller, “The Effect of Free Land Access on Former Slaves and Their Descendents”
- Jaime Bonet and Adolfo Meisel, “The Colonial Legacy as a Determinant of Regional Per Capita Income in Colombia”
- Masato Shizume, “A Reassessment of Japan’s Monetary Policy during the Great Depression: The Constraints and Remedies”
- Graeme G. Acheson, Charles R. Hickson, John D. Turner and Qing Ye, “Rule Britannia!: British Stock Market Returns, 1825-1870”
- Sandra González-Bailón and Tommy E. Murphy, “When Smaller Families Look Contagious – A Spatial Look at the French Fertility Decline Using an Agent-Based Simulation Model”
- David Eltis, Frank Lewis and Kimberly McIntyre, “The Cost Of Transporting Slaves to the Caribbean, 1683 – 1686”
- Susan Wolcott, “Microfinance in Colonial India”
- Ernst Juerg Weber, “The Role of the Real Interest Rate in U.S. Macroeconomic History”
- Tim Leunig, Chris Minns and Patrick Wallis, “How fluid were labour markets in pre-industrial Britain? New evidence from apprenticeship records”
- Julia Casutt and Ulrich Woitek, “Grain Prices and Mortality in Vienna, 1648-1754”
- Jari Eloranta and Mark Harrison, “Correlates of Mobilization in the Two World Wars”
- Gregory Clark and Neil Cummins, “Malthus to Modernity: When and How did Fertility Behavior Change in the Demographic Transition in England?”
- Ian Gazeleya and Andrew Newell, “Poverty in Britain in 1904: an early social survey rediscovered”
- Gary Richardson and Patrick Van Horn, “Fetters of Debt, Deposit, or Gold during the Great Depression? The International Propagation of the Banking Crisis of 1931”
- Lee J. Alston and Joseph P. Ferrie, “[Up and] Down on the Farm: Tenure Mobility and Intergenerational Wealth Transfers in U.S. Agriculture, 1880-1920”
- Christina Gathmann and Patricia Funk, “How do Electoral Systems Affect Fiscal Policy? Evidence from State and Local Governments”
- Niels Framroze Møller and Paul Sharp, “Malthus in Cointegration Space: A fresh look at the relationship between demography and living standards in pre-industrial England”
- Angelo Riva and Eugene N. White, “Danger on the Exchange: Counterparty Risk on the Paris Exchange in the Nineteenth Century”
- Peter B. Meyer, “New technologies and earnings variation within occupations since 1960”
- Hans-Christian Heinemeyer, Max-Stephan Schulze and Nikolaus Wolf, “Endogenous Borders? The effects of new borders on trade in Central Europe 1885-1933”