World Economy – "Divine economy"
In: Optimum. Studia Ekonomiczne, Heft 6(84), S. 3-12
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In: Optimum. Studia Ekonomiczne, Heft 6(84), S. 3-12
The economy of ancient Egypt is a difficult area of study due to the lack of preservation of much data (especially quantitative data); it is also a controversial subject on which widely divergent views have been expressed. It is certain, however, that the principal production and revenues of Egyptian society as a whole and of its individual members was agrarian, and as such, dependent on the yearly rising and receding of the Nile. Most agricultural producers were probably self-sufficient tenant farmers who worked the fields owned by wealthy individuals or state and temple estates. In addition to these, there were institutional and corvée workforces, and slaves, but the relative importance of these groups for society as a whole is difficult to assess. According to textual evidence, crafts were in the hands of institutional workforces, but indications also exist of craftsmen working for private contractors. Trade was essentially barter with reference to fixed units of textile, grain, copper, silver, and gold as measures of value. Coins were imported and produced in the Late Period, but a system close to a monetary economy is attested only from the Ptolemaic Period onward. Marketplaces were frequented by private individuals (including women) as well as professional traders, both native and foreign. Imports were secured by conquests and military control in the Levant, from which silver, oil, and wine reached Egypt, and in Nubia, rich in its deposits of gold.
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The economy of ancient Egypt is a difficult area of study due to the lack of preservation of much data (especially quantitative data); it is also a controversial subject on which widely divergent views have been expressed. It is certain, however, that the principal production and revenues of Egyptian society as a whole and of its individual members was agrarian, and as such, dependent on the yearly rising and receding of the Nile. Most agricultural producers were probably self-sufficient tenant farmers who worked the fields owned by wealthy individuals or state and temple estates. In addition to these, there were institutional and corvée workforces, and slaves, but the relative importance of these groups for society as a whole is difficult to assess. According to textual evidence, crafts were in the hands of institutional workforces, but indications also exist of craftsmen working for private contractors. Trade was essentially barter with reference to fixed units of textile, grain, copper, silver, and gold as measures of value. Coins were imported and produced in the Late Period, but a system close to a monetary economy is attested only from the Ptolemaic Period onward. Marketplaces were frequented by private individuals (including women) as well as professional traders, both native and foreign. Imports were secured by conquests and military control in the Levant, from which silver, oil, and wine reached Egypt, and in Nubia, rich in its deposits of gold.
BASE
The economy of ancient Egypt is a difficult area of study due to the lack of preservation of much data (especially quantitative data); it is also a controversial subject on which widely divergent views have been expressed. It is certain, however, that the principal production and revenues of Egyptian society as a whole and of its individual members was agrarian, and as such, dependent on the yearly rising and receding of the Nile. Most agricultural producers were probably self-sufficient tenant farmers who worked the fields owned by wealthy individuals or state and temple estates. In addition to these, there were institutional and corvée workforces, and slaves, but the relative importance of these groups for society as a whole is difficult to assess. According to textual evidence, crafts were in the hands of institutional workforces, but indications also exist of craftsmen working for private contractors. Trade was essentially barter with reference to fixed units of textile, grain, copper, silver, and gold as measures of value. Coins were imported and produced in the Late Period, but a system close to a monetary economy is attested only from the Ptolemaic Period onward. Marketplaces were frequented by private individuals (including women) as well as professional traders, both native and foreign. Imports were secured by conquests and military control in the Levant, from which silver, oil, and wine reached Egypt, and in Nubia, rich in its deposits of gold.
BASE
In: Studies in Computational Intelligence Ser. v.714
Intro -- Contents -- Introduction -- 1 Production and Economic Relations on the Internet: Another Level of Development of Economic Science -- 1.1 Unconventional Approach to Treatment of the New Economy -- 1.2 Factors of Functioning and Development of Internet Economy -- 1.3 Comparative Analysis of Internet Economy and Classic Economy -- 2 Internet Economy: Existence from the Point of View of Micro-economic Aspect -- 2.1 Notion and Sense of the Category "Internet Product" -- 2.2 The Nature of Mutual Functioning of Demand and Offer in the Market of Internet Goods -- 2.3 Emergence of Losses and Receipt of Results from Activities of Internet Economy Participants -- 3 Perspectives of Internet Economy Creation -- 3.1 Advantages of Internet Economy -- 3.2 Threats and Problems of Creation of Internet Economy -- 3.2.1 Theoretical Models of Internet Economy -- 4 Modern Foundations of Internet Economy -- 4.1 Basic Principles of Modern Internet Economy -- 4.2 Internet Economy and Theory of Reproduction: A Newly Created Tandem -- 4.3 Crisis in the System of Internet Economy: Reasons and Consequences -- 5 Methodological Aspects of Study of Internet Economy -- 5.1 Algorithm of Creation of Internet Economy -- 5.2 Methodology of Managing Internet Economy -- 5.3 Approaches to Evaluation of Internet Economy Effectiveness -- 6 Peculiarities of Formation and Development of Internet Economy in Russia -- 6.1 Preconditions of Formation of Internet Economy in Russia -- 6.2 Main Stages of Formation and Development of Internet Economy in Russia -- 6.3 Scenarios of Internet Economy Development in Russia -- Conclusions -- References.
ISSN: 0154-8344
ISSN: 1969-6779
In: Journal of Economic Issues, Vol. XXXVI No. 2 June 2002
SSRN
In: Journal of social and biological structures: studies in human sociobiology, Band 1, Heft 4, S. 319-337
ISSN: 0140-1750
In: Lo Spettatore Internazionale, Band 11, Heft 2, S. 135-147
In: Lo spettatore internazionale: bimestrale di politica estera. English edition, Band 11, Heft 2, S. 135-147
ISSN: 0584-8776
World Affairs Online
In: The annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, Band 198, Heft 1, S. 9-14
ISSN: 1552-3349
In: Monthly Review, Band 52, Heft 11, S. 16
ISSN: 0027-0520