HISTORY OF ECONOMIC AND BUSINESS

HISTORY OF ECONOMIC AND BUSINESS

Vittoria Ferrandino, Stefano Palermo

Instructional goals

To provide students with major analytic and comparative tools to interpret the evolution of world economic history from the industrial revolution to globalization and beyond.

Intended learning outcomes

Knowledge and understanding: At the end of the course students will have learned the main historical stages of the economic, social and institutional development process in Italy, in Europe and in the international economy. Applying knowledge and understanding: Students will be able to identify today's economic, social and institutional dynamics and identify which economic policy tools are best suited to stimulate and support economic development. Making judgements: The knowledge acquired during the course will allow students to critically evaluate the ongoing economic processes and analyse their possible impacts in industrial, cultural, technological and institutional transformations. The development of autonomy of judgment will be solicited by the teacher through student participation in discussions during lectures. Communications Skills: This course will provide students with the conceptual and lexical tools in order to communicate their acquired autonomy of judgment in a historical and contemporary key with clarity and competence in any context. Learning skills: The course aims to develop analysis and judgment skills on economic facts with a historical, dynamic and evolutionary approach, so that the student will be able to continue his formation with sufficient degree of autonomy

Course Contents

World economic history from the industrial revolution to globalization

Reference Books

Giuseppe Di Taranto, La globalizzazione diacronica, Torino, Giappichelli, 2013. Ennio De Simone, Storia economica. Dalla rivoluzione industriale alla rivoluzione informatica, Milano, Franco Angeli, 2018 (Excluded Chapters: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 23, 24, 27, 28, 29, 31, 34, 35, Appendix). Giuseppe Di Taranto, L’Europa tradita, Roma, Luiss University Press, 2017.

Teaching Methods

Up-front classes using traditional sources and electronic sources. Seminars

Assessment Method

The final written test is composed of 31 multiple choice questions (the 31st question allows for the attribution of honors), aimed mainly at testing the knowledge of the theoretical notions of economic history and the ability to critically apply the subject. The student must indicate the only correct answer among the three options proposed. One point is assigned to each correct answer; incorrect answers are not considered and are worth zero points. The minimum grade to pass the test is 18/30. The final exam will focus on the entire program contained in the syllabus.

Thesis assignment criteria

Commitment and interest showed, and abilities acquired by the student

Does the syllabus cover sustainability topics?

Yes

Week 1 Contenuto sessioni on line e on campus

On line session Presentation of the course. Subject and method. See: G. Di Taranto, La globalizzazione diacronica, Torino, Giappichelli, 2013, first chapter. On campus session Economic and business history: premises and goals. See: G. Di Taranto, La globalizzazione diacronica, Torino, Giappichelli, 2013, first chapter.

Week 2 Contenuto sessioni on line e on campus

On line session Economic systems: feudalism, mercantilism, industrial capitalism, collectivist economy. Rise and fall of capitalism. See: G. Di Taranto, La globalizzazione diacronica, Torino, Giappichelli, 2013, second chapter. On campus session Business cycles: short and long waves. Cycles and crises. See: G. Di Taranto, La globalizzazione diacronica, Torino, Giappichelli, 2013, chapter 3.

Week 3 Contenuto sessioni on line e on campus

On line session The Washington Consensus and globalization. See: G. Di Taranto, La globalizzazione diacronica, Torino, Giappichelli, 2013, fourth chapter. On campus session The ICT revolution and globalization. See: G. Di Taranto, La globalizzazione diacronica, Torino, Giappichelli, 2013, fourth chapter.

Week 4 Contenuto sessioni on line e on campus

On line session Diachronic globalization: developed economies. See: G. Di Taranto, La globalizzazione diacronica, Torino, Giappichelli, 2013, chapter fourth. On campus session Diachronic globalization: emerging economies and transition economies. See: G. Di Taranto, La globalizzazione diacronica, Torino, Giappichelli, 2013, chapter fourth

Week 5 Contenuto sessioni on line e on campus

On line session Europe betrayed: from market economy to crisis economy. See: G. Di Taranto, L’Europa tradita, Roma, Luiss University Press, 2017. On campus session Europe betrayed: new paradigms in economics. See: G. Di Taranto, L’Europa tradita, Roma, Luiss University Press, 2017.

Week 6 Contenuto sessioni on line e on campus

On line session The European economic and monetary integration process. Europe betrayed: fake economic convergence. Pt.1 See: G. Di Taranto, L’Europa tradita, Luiss University Press, 2017. On campus session The European economic and monetary integration process. Europe betrayed: fake economic convergence. Pt.2 See: G. Di Taranto, L’Europa tradita, Luiss University Press, 2017.

Week 7 Contenuto sessioni on line e on campus

On line session The first industrial revolution: economic sectors and innovation in UK. See: E. De Simone, Storia economica, Milano, Franco Angeli, 2018, chapters 6 to 7. On campus session Second-comer countries: France and the US. See: E. De Simone, Storia economica, Milano, Franco Angeli, 2018, chapter 8.

Week 8 Contenuto sessioni on line e on campus

On line session Growth between 1850 and 1914. See: E. De Simone, Storia economica, Milano, Franco Angeli, 2018, chapter 9. On campus session The second industrial revolution: new economic sectors and innovation. See: E. De Simone, Storia economica, Milano, Franco Angeli, 2018, chapters 10 to 13.

Week 9 Contenuto sessioni on line e on campus

On line session Industrialized countries: UK and France. See: E. De Simone, Storia economica, Milano, Franco Angeli, 2018, chapter 14. On campus session Fast-growing economies: Germany and the US. See: E. De Simone, Storia economica, Milano, Franco Angeli, 2018, chapter 15. Two case studies: Russia and Japan. See: E. De Simone, Storia economica, Milano, Franco Angeli, 2018, chapter 16.

Week 10 Contenuto sessioni on line e on campus

On line session The Italian economy since the Unification. See: E. De Simone, Storia economica, Milano, Franco Angeli, 2018, chapters 17-18 and 32. On campus session WWI and the economic consequences of the war. See: E. De Simone, Storia economica, Milano, Franco Angeli, 2018, chapter 19. Soviet Union. See: E. De Simone, Storia economica, Milano, Franco Angeli, 2018, chapter 20 and 33

Week 11 Contenuto sessioni on line e on campus

On line session The interwar years: the great depression, Keynes, and the New Deal. See: E. De Simone, Storia economica, Milano, Franco Angeli, 2018, chapters 21, 22. On campus session WWII and the economics of reconstruction. See: E. De Simone, Storia economica,Milano, Franco Angeli, 2018, chapter 25

Week 12 Contenuto sessioni on line e on campus

On line session From the Golden Age to the shock of the 1970s. See: E. De Simone, Storia economica, Milano, Franco Angeli, 2018, chapter 26. On campus session The developed economics: Usa e Japan. See: E. De Simone, Storia economica, Milano, Franco Angeli, 2018, chapter 30