Language, Knowledge and Growth: Evidence from Early Modern Europe

Working Paper: CEPR ID: DP15454

Authors: Christine Binzel; Andreas Link; Rajesh Ramachandran

Abstract: This paper documents a language change in printing from Latin to the vernaculars, the spoken tongues, in the immediate aftermath of the Protestant Reformation of 1517. As a result, the share of vernacular titles in Europe rose from around 30% in 1500 to almost 60% in 1600.With the increased use of the vernaculars in printing, the availability of knowledge and ideas increased at the city level and became more diverse in terms of authors and themes. Finally, we study long-run consequences. Using linguistic differences across cities as a source of exogenous variation in the number of vernacular titles printed in cities, we document a positive effect of vernacular printing output on upper-tail human capital and city growth. This suggests that the turn to the vernaculars in printing was an important driver of European dynamism in the early modern period.

Keywords: inclusive institutions; language; diglossia; upper-tail human capital; growth

JEL Codes: E02; N13; Z12; Z13


Causal Claims Network Graph

Edges that are evidenced by causal inference methods are in orange, and the rest are in light blue.


Causal Claims

CauseEffect
increase in vernacular printing output (A30)city growth (R11)
increase in vernacular printing output (A30)upper-tail human capital (J24)
number of vernacular titles printed (A30)city growth (R11)
number of vernacular titles printed (A30)upper-tail human capital (J24)
cities with larger vernacular printing output (R12)increase in city growth rates (R11)

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