Cultural vs. economic legacies of empires: Evidence from the partition of Poland

Article dans une revue: Poland was divided among three empires—Russia, Austria–Hungary, and Prussia—for over a century until 1918. The partition brought about divergence in culture, institutions, and economic development. We use spatial regression discontinuity to examine, which empire effects are persistent. We find that differences in incomes, industrial production, education, corruption, and trust in government institutions disappeared with time as they were smoothed by economic forces and policy intervention. In contrast, differences in intensity of religious practices and in beliefs in democratic ideals, i.e., democratic capital, persist presumably via inter-generational within-family transmission. Differences in railroad infrastructure built by empires during industrialization persisted to this day. Cultural empire legacies have an effect on the political outcomes in contemporary Poland.

Auteur(s)

Irena Grosfeld, Ekaterina Zhuravskaya

Revue
  • Journal of Comparative Economics
Date de publication
  • 2015
Mots-clés JEL
N33 N34 N44 P10 P16 Z
Mots-clés
  • Persistence
  • Partitions
  • Poland
  • Empires
  • Religiosity
Pages
  • 55-75
Version
  • 1
Volume
  • 43