The Trade Impact of the Zollverein

Working Paper: CEPR ID: DP9387

Authors: Wolfgang Keller; Carol H. Shiue

Abstract: The Zollverein was arguably the most important free-trade agreement of the 19th century. This paper investigates the economic impact of the Zollverein on trade in Germany. Although 1834 is the official date of the Zollverein's establishment, member states in fact joined in a non-random sequence over several decades. This was because the benefits of becoming a member increased, both as the size of the union increased, and as membership in the union became increasingly important for accessing foreign markets. Our key innovation in this paper is to incorporate the endogenous effects of accession into an estimate of the economic impact of the Zollverein customs union. We find these effects are important--our estimated effects are several times larger than the simpler estimates that do not take these effects into account. The paper discusses the implications of this for Germany's economic history as well as for other studies of trade liberalization.

Keywords: customs union; market integration; price convergence

JEL Codes: N73


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
Zollverein (F15)reduced bilateral price gaps between German cities (R12)
customs liberalization (F13)reduced bilateral price gaps between German cities (R12)
early state accession (P31)price gaps (F12)
Zollverein (F15)customs liberalization (F13)

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