Institutional Shocks and Proximate Causes of Growth: Evidence From the Era of French Rule in Italy

43 Pages Posted: 28 May 2019

See all articles by Michele Postigliola

Michele Postigliola

Sapienza University of Rome

Mauro Rota

Sapienza University of Rome

Date Written: April 30, 2019

Abstract

This paper examines the effect of French political control during the Napoleonic period on proximate causes of growth across nineteenth-century Italy, finding a strong association between the intensity of French reforms and the accumulation of both social and human capital. We demonstrate that the effect induced by the French control is robust to geographical factors, to pre-French characteristics, and to the economic growth of Italian provinces during the nineteenth century. Then, we use exogenous variation in the provincial distance to Paris, from which French local armies received military and intelligence support to acquire and maintain control over conquered territories, turning correlations into causal relations. Our contribution unveils the existence of an institutional mechanism behind the differences in some important drivers of economic growth across Italian provinces prior to Unification.

Keywords: French political control, institutional change, Enlightenment, social and human capital, modernization

JEL Classification: J24, N13, N93, O10, Z10

Suggested Citation

Postigliola, Michele and Rota, Mauro, Institutional Shocks and Proximate Causes of Growth: Evidence From the Era of French Rule in Italy (April 30, 2019). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3380469 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3380469

Michele Postigliola

Sapienza University of Rome ( email )

Piazzale Aldo Moro, 5
Rome, 00185
Italy

Mauro Rota (Contact Author)

Sapienza University of Rome ( email )

Piazzale Aldo Moro, 5
Rome, 00185
Italy

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