The rural exodus and the rise of Europe

We build a unified model of growth and internal migration and identify its deep parameters using an original set of Swedish data. Our structural estimation and counterfactual experiments suggest that conditions of migration between the countryside and cities have strongly shaped the timing and the i...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of economic growth (Boston, Mass.) Mass.), 2022-09, Vol.27 (3), p.365-414
Hauptverfasser: Baudin, Thomas, Stelter, Robert
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container_title Journal of economic growth (Boston, Mass.)
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creator Baudin, Thomas
Stelter, Robert
description We build a unified model of growth and internal migration and identify its deep parameters using an original set of Swedish data. Our structural estimation and counterfactual experiments suggest that conditions of migration between the countryside and cities have strongly shaped the timing and the intensity of the transition to growth. Mobility cost had to be low enough to enable population movement. Furthermore, initial productivity in rural industries had to be moderate to sustain the first phase of industrialization appearing in the countryside without delaying too much the second phase of industrialization taking place in cities. More than the initial productivity of rural industries or migration costs alone, what truly mattered for the transition to modern economic growth was the interplay between these two elements. By contrast, we evidence a poor role for mortality decline in the whole process. Finally, we discuss why our conclusions on Sweden are exemplary for the rest of Western Europe.
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subjects Agricultural production
Agriculture
Costs
Countryside
Demographics
Economic Growth
Economics
Economics and Finance
Fertility
Human capital
Humanities and Social Sciences
Industrial development
Industrial production
Industrialization
Internal migration
International Economics
Macroeconomics/Monetary Economics//Financial Economics
Migration
Mobility
Mortality
Productivity
Rural areas
Urban areas
Urbanization
title The rural exodus and the rise of Europe
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