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Mon 28 Oct, '24
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Economic History Seminar - Guillaume Blanc (Manchester)
S2.79

Title: Malthusian Migrations (with Romain Wacziarg)

We argue that societies with higher fertility experience increased levels of emigration. During the Age of Mass Migration, persistently high fertility created a large reservoir of surplus labor that could find better opportunities in the New World. We denote such migrations, from labor-abundant to land-abundant regions, as Malthusian migrations. Our results hold in a variety of datasets and specifications, across countries, regions, individuals, and periods. Using linguistic distance from French and twin births as instruments for fertility in crowdsourced genealogical data, we estimate a large effect of fertility on out-migration. Within households, later born children were more likely to migrate as fertility increased, particularly in regions with egalitarian inheritance. We develop a Malthusian model allowing for emigration as a way to escape population pressures, alleviating the negative effects of high fertility and contributing to the emergence of modern economic growth.

 

Mon 18 Nov, '24
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Economic History Seminar - Chiaki Moriguchi (Hitotsubashi)
S2.79

Title: Meritocracy and Its Discontents: Long-run Effects of Repeated School Admission Reforms

Authors: Chiaki Moriguchi, Yusuke Narita, Mari Tanaka
Abstract: What happens if selective colleges change their admission policies? We study this question by analyzing the world's first implementation of nationally centralized meritocratic admissions in the early twentieth century. We find a persistent meritocracy-equity tradeoff. Compared to the decentralized system, the centralized system admitted more high-achievers and produced more occupational elites (such as top income earners) decades later in the labor market. This gain came at a distributional cost, however. Meritocratic centralization also increased the number of urban-born elites relative to rural-born ones, undermining equal access to higher education and career advancement.

Mon 17 Feb, '25
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Economic History Seminar - Toike Aidt (Cambridge)
S2.79

Title to be advised.

Mon 10 Mar, '25
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Economic History Seminar - Arthi Vellore (UCI)
S2.79

Title to be advised.

Mon 12 May, '25
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Economic History Seminar - Andreas Ferrara (Pitt)
S2.79

Title to be advised.

Mon 19 May, '25
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Economic History Seminar - Stephan Heblich (Toronto)
S2.79

Title to be advised.

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