2010
DOI: 10.1016/j.eeh.2010.05.001
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Was Malthus right? The relationship between population and real wages in Italian history, 1320 to 1870

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Cited by 25 publications
(17 citation statements)
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“…The estimated IR shows that contrary to the Malthusian scheme, the income‐population feedback which predicts that a better standard of living leads to population growth did not occur in pre‐industrial Italy (Figure ). This result is consistent with Chiarini (), who stresses that the empirical result, albeit consistent with the “old age security motive”, is also explained by a process of human capital accumulation in which households substitute child quantity for child quality (parents investing in education). As Figure shows, there is some significant evidence for the population's negative response to rural wages (the main source of income).…”
Section: Vector Error Correction Analysis: Simulation Resultssupporting
confidence: 90%
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“…The estimated IR shows that contrary to the Malthusian scheme, the income‐population feedback which predicts that a better standard of living leads to population growth did not occur in pre‐industrial Italy (Figure ). This result is consistent with Chiarini (), who stresses that the empirical result, albeit consistent with the “old age security motive”, is also explained by a process of human capital accumulation in which households substitute child quantity for child quality (parents investing in education). As Figure shows, there is some significant evidence for the population's negative response to rural wages (the main source of income).…”
Section: Vector Error Correction Analysis: Simulation Resultssupporting
confidence: 90%
“…The standard explanation for economic stagnation in the pre‐industrial era, namely the Malthusian income‐population feedback, which suggests that a better standard of living leads to a population increase, does not apply to pre‐industrial Italy. This result is consistent with Chiarini (), according to whom the most plausible theoretical explanations are the old‐age security motive as well as a primitive process of human capital accumulation (parents replaced child quantity with child quality). However, this is the only evidence, along with the urbanisation rate, that indicates a possible deviation from the Malthusian regime.…”
Section: Introductionsupporting
confidence: 91%
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“…Both Fernihough, ‘Malthusian dynamics’, and Malanima, ‘Le crisi tradizionali’, reach the same results with different procedures. A non‐Malthusian view of the Italian economy is presented by Chiarini, ‘Was Malthus right?’.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Earlier international research on the effect of economic stress on the population in the pre-industrial period has largely relied on real wages or grain prices as indicators of living or nutritional standards (Wrigley and Schofield 1989, pp. 368-384;Galloway 1988Galloway , 1994Lee and Anderson 2002;Nicolini 2007;Bengtsson and Broström 2011;Bengtsson and Ohlsson 1985;Dribe 2003;Crafts and Mills 2009;Pfister and Fertig 2010;Chiarini 2010;Klemp 2012;Møller and Sharp 2014;Klemp and Møller forthcoming). 1 Malthusians often point to the development of real wages, which fell from the late Middle Ages to the early nineteenth century, to advance their main proposition that population growth outpaced production (Allen 2001;Clark 2007).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%