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Anna Missiaia

Visiting research fellow

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Business Fluctuations in Imperial Austria's Regions, 1867-1913: New Evidence

Author

  • Anna Missiaia
  • Carlo Ciccarelli

Summary, in English

This paper presents annual estimates of total and per-capita GDP at 1910 prices for the regions of Imperial Austria from the origin of the Dual Monarchy (1867) to the eve of WWI (1913). The time paths of regional GDP are estimated from the yield of the tax on the transfer of real and financial property which is itself very highly correlated with the Schulze (2007) estimates of regional GDP for census years (1870, 1880, 1890, 1900, and 1910). The relative continuity or discontinuity of per-capita GDP growth partitions Austria's regions into two groups. Clear evidence of discontinuity (a "take-off") is present in Carniola, Carinthia, Salzburg, Styria, Littoral, Tyrol, and to some extent Moravia. In Lower and Upper Austria, Bohemia, Silesia, Galicia, Bukovina, and Dalmatia there is instead no evidence of structural break in their growth rates. Significant drops in the level of per-capita GDP do occur (as in Lower Austria and Bohemia after the 1873 financial crash) but have moderate effects on the growth of subsequent years. Regional (per-capita) inequality is also evaluated using standard measures. The coefficient of variation and Theil index follow a U-shaped curve: after a decline lasted about 15 years they both rise and point to, from ca. 1885, growing divergence.

Publishing year

2014

Language

English

Publication/Series

Economic History working paper series

Issue

186

Document type

Working paper

Publisher

London: School of Economics and Political Science

Topic

  • Economic History

Keywords

  • Austria
  • Habsburg Empire
  • Regional GDP
  • Growth
  • Inequality
  • N13
  • N33
  • N94
  • O11
  • O18
  • R11

Status

Published