New Evidence on Road Quality and Travel in Industrializing England
Key Highlights
Economics · Economic History
A new study in Explorations in Economic History provides granular evidence on how road quality influenced travel speeds and economic integration across England and Wales between 1660 and 1820. The authors construct a novel dataset linking road improvements to measurable reductions in journey times, revealing that transport infrastructure upgrades significantly expanded market access and regional trade. For a scholar of economic history and industrial planning, this work offers a rigorous empirical template for assessing how state-led infrastructure investment shaped pre-modern economic development.
Novelty: 88%
Rigor: 94%
Significance: 85%
Validity: 92%
Clarity: 90%
Economics · International Economics
This paper in The World Economy investigates how domestic environmental regulations affect firms’ integration into Global Value Chains (GVCs) across developing countries, drawing on World Bank Enterprise Surveys. The findings show that stringent domestic regulations increase firms’ likelihood of GVC participation, supporting the Porter Hypothesis, and that this effect is amplified by R&D investment and foreign ownership. For a professional with experience at the EIF and EIB evaluating industrial and institutional policy, this study provides direct evidence on how regulatory frameworks can shape international competitiveness and firm-level integration into global markets.
Novelty: 82%
Rigor: 88%
Significance: 80%
Validity: 85%
Clarity: 87%
Economics · Financial Economics
A study published in the Journal of International Trade & Economic Development examines the relationship between financial development and economic growth across a global panel, with a focus on the moderating role of institutional quality. The results indicate that stronger institutions significantly amplify the growth-enhancing effects of financial deepening, particularly in developing economies. This analysis is directly relevant to policy evaluation work at institutions like the EIB, where understanding how institutional frameworks mediate the impact of financial sector interventions is critical for designing effective development programs.
Novelty: 75%
Rigor: 84%
Significance: 78%
Validity: 80%
Clarity: 86%
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