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Institutional Transplant and Cultural Proximity: Evidence from Nineteenth-Century Prussia
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 09 October 2019
Abstract
This article presents evidence that cultural proximity between the exporting and the receiving countries positively affects the adoption of new institutions and the resulting long-term economic outcomes. We obtain this result by combining new information on pre-Napoleonic principalities with county-level census data from nineteenth-century Prussia. We exploit a quasi-natural experiment generated by radical Napoleonic institutional reforms and the deeply rooted cultural heterogeneity across Prussian counties. We show that institutional reforms in counties that are culturally more similar to France, in terms of religious affiliation, generate better long-term economic performance.
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- © The Economic History Association 2019
Footnotes
We thank the co-editor Dan Bogart and two anonymous referees for comments that helped substantially to improve the article. We are grateful to Alberto Alesina, Maristella Botticini, Rosario Crinò, Francesco Giavazzi, and Guido Tabellini for their invaluable supervision; Tommaso Aquilante, Davide Cantoni, Michela Carlana, Italo Colantone, Laura Doval, James Fenske, Nicola Gennaioli, Gunes Gokmen, Carl Hallmann, Christopher Koenig, Eliana La Ferrara, Joel Mokyr, Tommaso Nannicini, Tommaso Orlando, Santiago Maria Perez Vincent, Nicola Persico, Pierre-Charles Pradier, Severine Toussaert, and Ludger Woessmann for their useful comments, suggestions, and fruitful discussions; and participants of the ASREC 2017, CESifo Workshop on Political Economy, Econometric Society European Winter Meeting 2016, Oxford Development Economic Workshop, and EDGE Jamboree, and seminars at Università Bocconi, Yale University, and Birmingham Business School. We gratefully acknowledge financial support from the Cowles Foundation for Research in Economics, Fondazione Cariplo, and Università Bocconi.
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