Skip to content

Rome's Economic Revolution

Philip Kay
Barcode 9780198788546
Paperback

Sold out
Original price £56.98 - Original price £56.98
Original price
£56.98
£56.98 - £56.98
Current price £56.98

Click here to join our rewards scheme and earn points on this purchase!

Availability:
Out of stock

Release Date: 13/10/2016

Label: Oxford University Press
Series: Oxford Studies on the Roman Economy
Language: English
Publisher: Oxford University Press

Kay examines the economic change in Rome between the Second Punic War and the middle of the first century BC. He focuses on how the increased inflow of bullion and expansion of the availability of credit resulted in real per capita economic growth in the Italian peninsula, radically changing the composition and scale of the Roman economy.
In this volume, Philip Kay examines economic change in Rome and Italy between the Second Punic War and the middle of the first century BC. He argues that increased inflows of bullion, in particular silver, combined with an expansion of the availability of credit to produce significant growth in monetary liquidity. This, in turn, stimulated market developments, such as investment farming, trade, construction, and manufacturing, and radically changed the composition and scale of the Roman economy. Using a wide range of evidence and scholarly investigation, Kay demonstrates how Rome, in the second and first centuries BC, became a coherent economic entity experiencing real per capita economic growth. Without an understanding of this economic revolution, the contemporaneous political and cultural changes in Roman society cannot be fully comprehended or explained.