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Comparative European institutions and the Little Divergence, 1385-1800

Comparative European institutions and the Little Divergence, 1385-1800

583/2021 Antonio Henriques and Nuno Palma
economic history, working papers
Journal of Economic Growth
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10887-022-09213-5

583/2021 Antonio Henriques and Nuno Palma

Why did the countries that first benefited from access to the New World – Castile and Portugal – decline relative to their followers, especially England and the Netherlands? The dominant narrative is that worse initial institutions at the time of the opening of the Atlantic trade explain the Iberian divergence. In this paper, we build a new dataset which allows for a comparison of institutional quality over time. We consider the frequency and nature of parliamentary meetings, the frequency and intensity of extraordinary taxation and coin debasement, and real interest rates and spreads for public debt. We find no evidence that the political institutions of Portugal and Spain were worse until the English Civil War.

Economic History

Journal of Economic Growth

https://doi.org/10.1007/s10887-022-09213-5