<i>'. . . this book is a collection of well written, very interesting and informative essays that should be valuable to scholars and professional practitioners in the fields of economic history and political science.'</i>
- Fredrik Wilander, Scandinavian Economic History Review,
<i>'This collection of papers provides important and refreshing context to today's issues, reminding us that the debate over effective regulation is not new and that today's regulations have historical roots . . . Overall, </i>The State, Regulation and the Economy<i> provides a thoughtful collection of papers that give good historical context to contemporary regulatory issues. It reminds us that today's regulations have historical roots that not only help explain why regulations look the way they do, but also that the historical evolution of regulation can help us understand issues facing regulatory policy today.'</i>
- Scott Wallsten, The Journal of Economic History,
<i>'Occasionally . . . studies come along that take seriously the charge that historians perform genuinely historical studies, in which early events can endure and have lasting impacts on future outcomes (so-called path dependence). </i>The State Regulation and the Economy<i> is an ambitious foray into this area . . . </i>The State, Regulation and the Economy<i> is an excellent volume which I very much enjoyed reading. It is a productive collaboration of practitioners of different disciplines, and provides much useful information and interpretation of the long-term regulatory experiences of two quite different economies. The editors are to be commended for attempting to fill an important gap in the literature on comparative institutional change.'</i>
- Mark Kanazawa, EH.Net,