Jonas Ljungberg
Professor emeritus
The impact of the great emigration on the Swedish economy
Emigrationens påverkan på Sveriges ekonomi
Author
Summary, in English
In the half-century before 1914 wages in Sweden advanced from below the West European average to being at a level with those in Britain. This remarkable record has seldom been addressed, but the very rapid concurrent Swedish economic growth is well known. The present article argues that the increase in wages was not only due to industrialisation, but that another major factor was the trans-Atlantic emigration, which drained the supply of labour. Central to the argument is that this effect of emigration interacted with. a structural change within the Swedish economy. The traditional export industries faced stiffening competition, and could not afford the higher wages. But the newly emerging branches of industry relied on modern technology, could pay their workers more, and grew. The article explores factors of demand and supply in the Swedish labour market, and on the basis ofd~ta at the county level the emigration elasticity of growth in daywages is estimated. A tentative counterfactual case confirms that emigration was a major factor in the elevation of wages in Sweden.
Department/s
- Department of Economic History
- Growth, technological change, and inequality
- Financial history, banking and insurance
Publishing year
1997-05-01
Language
English
Pages
159-189
Publication/Series
Scandinavian Economic History Review
Volume
45
Issue
2
Document type
Journal article review
Publisher
Routledge
Topic
- Economic History
Status
Published
ISBN/ISSN/Other
- ISSN: 1750-2837