------------ EH.NET BOOK REVIEW --------------
Published by EH.NET (August 2006)
Susan B. Carter, Scott Sigmund Gartner, Michael R. Haines, Alan L.
Olmstead, Richard Sutch, and Gavin Wright, editors, _Historical
Statistics of the United States, Volume Two: Work and Welfare_. New
York: Cambridge University Press, 2006. xiv + 964 pp. $825 (for the
five-volume set), ISBN: 0-521-58540-6.
Reviewed for EH.NET by Thomas N. Maloney, Department of Economics,
University of Utah.
This book distills into one massive but handy volume the efforts of
an inestimable number of researchers to quantify the development of
labor market outcomes and living standards in U.S. history. It
contains nearly ten thousand data series (or columns of data), spread
across nearly one thousand pages, covering the following topics:
"labor," including labor force participation, occupations, wages,
hours and working conditions, union participation, and household
production; slavery; education; health; economic inequality and
poverty; social insurance and public assistance; and nonprofit,
voluntary, and religious entities. (The other four volumes in the
_Historical Statistics_ project cover "population," "economic
structure and performance," "economic sectors," and "governance and
international relations.")
While the agglomeration of all these data series is the obvious
purpose of this project, the book also contains a series of essays
introducing the data on each topic and providing context. These
essays are uniformly well-written and useful. They are also quite
accessible, which should make this volume an important resource for
interested groups beyond the scholarly community. While the essays
share these qualities, they also vary in their purposes and strengths.
A few of the essays provide an extensive amount of analytical
discussion in addition to introducing the data series on a given
topic. Susan B. Carter's essay on "Labor" is practically a short
course in U.S. economic history, examining the rise in living
standards over time as it relates to increases in labor force
participation and increases in the productivity of employed workers.
Linda Barrington and Gordon M. Fisher's essay on "Poverty," while
narrower in its focus, is similar in that it provides a very
extensive, analytical discussion of changes in the concept of poverty
over time and the implications of these changes for the measurement
of poverty.
One of the main virtues of a reference work like this is that it can
integrate related material that exists in many disparate and perhaps
obscure original sources. A few of the essays (and their related data
series) are especially valuable in this way, including Robert A.
Margo's contribution on "Wages," William A Sundstrom's piece on
"Hours and Working Conditions," Lee A. Craig's essay on "Household
Production," Stephen T. Ziliak and Joan Underhill Hannon's "Public
Assistance: Colonial Times to the 1920s," and Peter Dobkin Hall and
Colin B. Burke's essay on "Nonprofit, Voluntary, and Religious
Entities."
In other chapters, the data come largely from well-known sources.
Nearly all of the material on occupations, for instance, comes from
the Integrated Public Use Microdata Series (IPUMS) Census samples,
and much of the information on social welfare and social insurance
programs in the twentieth century comes from the _Social Security
Bulletin_. Even in these cases, though, the essays (by Matthew Sobek
on "Occupations" and by Price V. Fishback and Melissa A. Thomasson on
"Social Welfare: 1929 to the Present") provide very useful insights
into the proper interpretation of the numbers and changes in their
meaning over time.
I would single out Claudia Goldin's essay on "Education" as being
particularly valuable as a guide to the use of the included data.
Goldin provides an appendix to her essay in which she consolidates
her discussion of sources, comments on how these series relate to
those provided in prior editions of _Historical Statistics_, and also
guides researchers to the best sources for future updates of these
series. I hesitate to suggest this, having some sense of the
gargantuan effort already expended on this work, but if any ongoing
revisions are planned for the online version of this project, a brief
appendix for each section, following Goldin's model, would be a nice
addition.
I obviously can not comment in detail on all of the included data
series. I will note that I was struck by the breadth of the material
included, even given my high expectations (and the thickness of the
volume). The material on "Health," overseen by Richard H. Steckel,
goes well beyond the measures of well-being associated with
anthropometric work and includes information on health care
expenditure, the availability of hospitals and other health care
facilities (and their use), insurance coverage, the supply of
physicians and nurses, the prevalence of smoking and drug use, the
composition of diets, and a number of other related phenomena.
Similarly, Goldin's chapter on education incorporates a wealth of
detail not only on educational attainment but on subjects studied in
school, faculty and staff numbers, standardized test scores, and
higher education costs.
As inclusive as the volume is, though, there are some probably
unavoidable holes. By design, national totals are emphasized, and
very few of the series are presented in a geographically
disaggregated way. In addition, some series that one might expect to
find in this volume are presented elsewhere in the five-volume set
and not repeated here. For instance, much of the material related to
colonial-era slavery apparently appears in volume 5 ("Governance and
International Relations"), chapter Eg ("Colonial Statistics"), and
not in the "Slavery" chapter of this volume. This obviously should
not be too great an inconvenience for individuals at institutions
that acquire the complete five-volume set and the online version. I
am certainly urging my university's library to do so.
Thomas N. Maloney is an Associate Professor in the Department of
Economics at the University of Utah. His research focuses on race,
migration, and labor markets in the U.S. His recent work includes
"Ghettos and Jobs in History: Neighborhood Effects on African
American Occupational Status and Mobility in World War I-Era
Cincinnati," Social Science History 29:2.
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Published by EH.Net (August 2006). All EH.Net reviews are archived at
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