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Economic History Talk

Friday, November 22, 2024
12:00pm to 1:00pm
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Baxter 239
Technological Change and the Market for Books, 1450-1550
Qiyi Zhao, PhD Student, Department of Economics, Stanford University,

Abstract: This paper considers how movable-type printing's economic features shaped the early modern book market using product-level data. Building on a lively medieval tradition of manuscript production, Gutenberg's innovation did not simply reduce costs; it introduced new incentives and constraints that altered both the product's nature and the market's structure. First, printing's business model encouraged the production of shorter and simpler books targeting a poorer and less literate audience. Second, its cost structure led to product differentiation and prolific trade rather than direct competition and localized production, making available a greater variety of products offering diverse information and perspectives. Rather than simply making medieval books cheaper and more abundant, these changes may represent printing technology's true contribution to European economic development.

For more information, please contact Diana Bohler by phone at 626-395-4220 or by email at dbohler@caltech.edu.