Jakob Molinder
Researcher
A Workers’ Revolution in Sweden? Exploring Economic Growth and Distributional Change with Detailed Data on Construction Workers’ Wages, 1831–1900
Author
Summary, in English
The impact of the transition to modern economic growth on the distribution of income is widely debated. The experience of early industrializers like Britain and the US has informed much of the debate, lending support to the idea embedded in the models of Kuznets and Lewis that real wages of laborers tend to lag behind the growth of GDP per capita in the early stages of economic development. We examine the impact growth on workers in Sweden using a new dataset on daily wages for helpers, carpenters, masons, and teamsters over the 1831–1900 period. The data has a uniquely detailed geographical coverage, including a broad set of places in the countryside as well as towns. Our new series shows that real wage growth began in the mid-1850s, that the average yearly increase was substantial and superseding GDP per capita growth after 1880, that it was larger for unskilled helpers than higher-skilled groups, and was present in the countryside and urban areas alike. A comparison with Northern Europe shows that unskilled workers in Sweden benefited to a much greater extent from economic growth, highlighting the importance of paying careful attention to distributional issues when comparing living standards across countries.
Department/s
- Department of Economic History
Publishing year
2018
Language
English
Publication/Series
Lund Papers in Economic History. Education and the Labour Market
Issue
2018:181
Full text
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Document type
Working paper
Topic
- Economic History
Keywords
- wages
- inequality
- distribution
- economic development
- growth
- living standards
- Kuznets-curve
- Lewis
- N00
- N13
- N33
- O14
- J31
Status
Published