Missing Men: World War II Casualities and Structural Change

  • Christoph Eder (Speaker)

Activity: Talk or presentationContributed talkunknown

Description

This paper investigates the long-term consequences of violent conflict and the associated human casualties on economic development. Using the World War II casualties suffered in Austrian municipalities as a natural experiment, I find a significant negative causal effect of human losses on economic activity, as measured by the current total wage bill in the affected communities today. The underlying determinants of this reduction in output are traced back to a lower number and density of firms, along with a smaller work force. However, this is only true for the service sector and not the manufacturing sector. As I demonstrate, the likely channel through which the effect persisted over time is through its impact on the structural composition of the work force. Specifically, greater human losses increased the fraction of employment in manufacturing at the expense of agriculture until the 1970s and services from then onwards. A simple model shows that structural change can translate a lower labor share in agricultural production into less participation of service sector growth at a later time.
Period28 Aug 2014
Event titleEuropean Economic Association & Econometric Society
Event typeConference
LocationFranceShow on map

Fields of science

  • 502 Economics

JKU Focus areas

  • Social Systems, Markets and Welfare States