Publication Date:
2020
Abstract:
This paper contributes to the debate on the effects of transport infrastructure endowment on productivity by adding a historical perspective. This allows us to address the issue in a proving ground where the effects of the existing stock of infrastructures are negligible. At the time of unification in 1861, the Kingdom of Italy started a large infrastructure project to spread railways all over the country. We find that railways played a positive effect on manufacturing productivity across the country over the period 1871-1911, without a differential effect along the North/South divide. Railways also had strong spillover effects in neighboring provinces so that provinces that started with a higher endowment of railways benefited more than those who were newly endowed. Roads also had a positive effect, but smaller than railways.
CRIS type:
1.1 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Railways, roads, manufacturing productivity, Italy
List of contributors:
Pontarollo, N; Ricciuti, R
Published in: