From Global to Local: Trade Shocks and Regional Growth in Italy During the First Globalization
Abstract
Globalization can create winners and losers at the spatial level within national
economies. 1bis paper examines the economic impact of international trade on local
economies in the case of late nineteenth-century Italy. We combine data on foreign
trade at the national level with census data on manufacturing employment, and with our
new estimates of agricultural employment by crop at the provincial level. Crossing this
information, we compute two measures of trade exposure at the local level, namely
import penetration and export ratio. We then perform a pand analysis to test whether
changes in trade exposure explained provincial GDP growth. First, we detect that
import penetration af agricultural products was associated with lower growth af
Southern provinces. Second, we :find that Northern provinces were more able to
benefit from positive export dynamics in the manufacturing sector. The latter finding
might stem from a higher degree of mechanization among Northern manufacturing
firms. These results suggest that trade exposure could have been a factor contributing
to widening the (already existent and growing) North-South gap.
Publisher
DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMY AND SOCIETY
View/ Open
Date
2022-11Author
Gomellini, Matteo
Missiaia, Anna
Pellegrino, Dario
Keywords
First Globalization
lntemational Trade
Regional Development
Italian Economic History
Publication type
report
ISSN
1653-1000
Series/Report no.
Göteborg Papers in Economic History 30
Language
eng