Abstract
This paper examines how market access and land concentration affected agricultural productivity in the late 19th-century Habsburg Empire. By utilizing new cross-sectional data and employing an instrumental variable approach, this paper demonstrates that market access positively affected agricultural productivity, while land concentration had a negative impact. Exploring the mechanism, this paper finds that market access enhanced productivity by promoting the use of machinery capital, increasing the utilization of wage labor, and facilitating a shift from pastoral agriculture to barn feeding. The negative effects of land concentration were mostly caused by a decrease in labor intensity and limited use of draft animals. While large estates were more inclined to mechanize than family farms, their preference for labor-extensive agriculture more than outweighed the productivity benefits from mechanization. In contrast, family farms reaped significant benefits from market access. They effectively utilized surplus family labor and adopted labor-intensive and land-saving technologies like barn-feeding, which boosted their productivity levels.
Originalsprache | Englisch |
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Erscheinungsort | Vienna |
Seiten | 1-56 |
Publikationsstatus | Veröffentlicht - Juni 2023 |
Schlagwörter
- Land inequality
- Market Access
- Agricultural Productivity
- Agricultural Innovation