2018
DOI: 10.1017/s0022050718000487
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Benefits of Empire? Capital Market Integration North and South of the Alps, 1350–1800

Abstract: This paper addresses two questions. First, when and to what extent did capital markets integrate north and south of the Alps? Second, how mobile was capital? Analysing a unique new dataset on pre-modern urban annuities, we find that northern markets were consistently better integrated than Italian markets. Long-term integration was driven by initially peripheral places in the Netherlands and Upper Germany integrating with the rest of the Holy Roman Empire where the distance and volume of inter-urban investment… Show more

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Cited by 17 publications
(21 citation statements)
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“…This signified a relative increase in centralisation. The impact of the Empire on market integration has been recently analysed by Chilosi, Schulze, and Volckart (2018). Equation (2) features three types of differences: (a) the difference in rye price gaps between pairs of either strictly Imperial or Polish cities, (b) the difference in rye price gaps before and after the 1660s, that is, the introduction of the liberum veto in 1669 and the beginning of Reichstag's supremacy in 1663, and (c) the difference-in-difference.…”
Section: Methodology and Sourcesmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…This signified a relative increase in centralisation. The impact of the Empire on market integration has been recently analysed by Chilosi, Schulze, and Volckart (2018). Equation (2) features three types of differences: (a) the difference in rye price gaps between pairs of either strictly Imperial or Polish cities, (b) the difference in rye price gaps before and after the 1660s, that is, the introduction of the liberum veto in 1669 and the beginning of Reichstag's supremacy in 1663, and (c) the difference-in-difference.…”
Section: Methodology and Sourcesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Various studies measured the extent of market integration in preindustrial Europe (e.g., Bateman 2011;Chilosi et al 2013;Chilosi, Schulze, and Volckart 2018;Frederico 2012;Malinowski 2016a;Shiue and Keller 2007). The results yield that, after a period of medieval disintegration, markets only became effectively integrated in the nineteenth century.…”
Section: Theoretical Frameworkmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Chilosi and Volckart, ‘Money’, pp. 783–4; Chilosi, Schulze, and Volckart, ‘Benefits of empire?’, pp. 28–30; see also Spruyt, Sovereign state , esp.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%