Benefits of empire? Capital market integration north and south of the Alps, 1350-1800

Chilosi, DavidORCID logo; Schulze, Max-StephanORCID logo; and Volckart, OliverORCID logo (2018) Benefits of empire? Capital market integration north and south of the Alps, 1350-1800 Journal of Economic History, 78 (3). 637 - 672. ISSN 0022-0507
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This paper addresses two questions. First, when and to what extent did capital markets integrate north and south of the Alps? Second, how mobile was capital? Analysing a unique new dataset on pre-modern urban annuities, we find that northern markets were consistently better integrated than Italian markets. Long-term integration was driven by initially peripheral places in the Netherlands and Upper Germany integrating with the rest of the Holy Roman Empire where the distance and volume of inter-urban investments grew primarily in the sixteenth century. The institutions of the Empire contributed to stronger market integration north of the Alps


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