Dialects, cultural identity, and economic exchange
In: CESifo working paper series 2961
In: Fiscal policy, macroeconomics and growth
Abstract
We investigate whether time-persistent cultural borders impede economic exchange across regions of the same country. To measure cultural differences we evaluate, for the first time in economics, linguistic micro-data about phonological and grammatical features of German dialects. These data are taken from a unique linguistic survey conducted between 1879 and 1888 in 45,000 schools. Matching this information to 439 current German regions, we construct a dialect similarity matrix. Using a gravity analysis, we show that current cross-regional migration is positively affected by historical dialect similarity. This suggests that cultural identities formed in the past still influence economic exchange today.
Verfügbarkeit
Sprachen
Englisch
Verlag
Univ., Center for Economic Studies
Problem melden