2019
DOI: 10.1093/jeea/jvz006
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Human Capital Formation During the First Industrial Revolution: Evidence from the use of Steam Engines

Abstract: We examine the effect of technical change on human capital formation during England's Industrial Revolution. Using the number of steam engines installed by 1800 as a synthetic indicator of technological change and occupational statistics to measure working skills (using HISCLASS), we establish a positive correlation between the use of steam engines and the share of skilled workers at the county level. We use exogenous variation in carboniferous rock strata (containing coal to fuel the engines) to show that the… Show more

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Cited by 53 publications
(21 citation statements)
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“…At the same time, steam power was a general purpose technology, which could be employed in a wide variety of industries (even agriculture), which makes it a much better proxy for modern technology, broadly speaking, than other industrial technologies which were more sector-specific and would therefore correlate with the degree of this or that district's specialization in a particular sector rather than with the general level of technological development. The relationship between steam technology and human capital has been similarly exploited in the case of France and Great Britain (Lacroix 2018;Diebolt et al 2017;de Pleijt et al 2018;Franck and Galor 2017). Similar argument can be made for the railroad.…”
Section: Our Datamentioning
confidence: 89%
“…At the same time, steam power was a general purpose technology, which could be employed in a wide variety of industries (even agriculture), which makes it a much better proxy for modern technology, broadly speaking, than other industrial technologies which were more sector-specific and would therefore correlate with the degree of this or that district's specialization in a particular sector rather than with the general level of technological development. The relationship between steam technology and human capital has been similarly exploited in the case of France and Great Britain (Lacroix 2018;Diebolt et al 2017;de Pleijt et al 2018;Franck and Galor 2017). Similar argument can be made for the railroad.…”
Section: Our Datamentioning
confidence: 89%
“…They confirm causality from industrialization to literacy and education attainment. De Pleijt et al (2016) find that English counties that adopted steam engines at early phase of industrialization later had a higher share of skilled workers. Overall, the literature establishes a positive impact of industrialization on human capital; either on educational outcomes or on skills.…”
Section: B Industrialization Increasing Human Capital and Opposition To Autocratic Rulementioning
confidence: 98%
“…providing two additional instruments for industrialization. The share of a département's surface covered by a carboniferous (= coal bearing) geological strata measures access to coal (as in de Pleijt et al, 2016). Access to suitable water flows is computed using data from gauging stations in modern France.…”
Section: Identification Strategymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The 19th century saw the first industrial revolution in the textile industry as new production methods were employed (Crafts, 2011 ; De Pleijt, Nuvolari, & Weisdorf, 2020 ; Mohajan, 2019 ). The first, second and third industrial revolutions have created the foundation for the technological developments in the dynamic fourth industrial revolution in the 21st century.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%