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Event

Michael Peters (Yale University), "Market Size and Spatial Growth - Evidence from Germany’s Post-War Population Expulsions”

Friday, February 14, 2020 15:30to17:00
Leacock Building Leacock 429, 855 rue Sherbrooke Ouest, Montreal, QC, H3A 2T7, CA

Michael Peters (Yale University)
Host: Markus Poschke

Date: February 14, 2020
Location: Leacock 429

Website:

"Market Size and Spatial Growth - Evidence from Germany’s Post-War Population Expulsions”

Abstract:
Can increases in the size of the population raise productivity and spur economic development? This paper uses a particular historical episode to study this question empirically. In the aftermath of the Second World War, between 1945 and 1948, about 8m Ethnic Germans were expelled from their domiciles in Central and Eastern Europe and transferred to Western Germany. At the time, this inflow amounted to almost 20% of the Western German population. Using variation across counties I show that the settlement of refugees had a large and persistent effect on the local population, that it was associated with an increase manufacturing employment and that it increased income per capita, particularly in the long-run. I then show that these findings are quantitatively consistent with an idea-based theory of spatial growth, which implies that a shock to the local population can have persistent and protracted effects on local productively if labor mobility is limited. When calibrated to the reduced form regression estimates, the model implies that the inflow of refugees increased aggregate income per capita by about 25% after 25 years.

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