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Was Weber Wrong? A Human Capital Theory of Protestant Economic History

Sascha O. Becker () and Ludger Woessmann ()

The Quarterly Journal of Economics, 2009, vol. 124, issue 2, pages 531-596

Abstract: Max Weber attributed the higher economic prosperity of Protestant regions to a Protestant work ethic. We provide an alternative theory: Protestant economies prospered because instruction in reading the Bible generated the human capital crucial to economic prosperity. We test the theory using county-level data from late-nineteenth-century Prussia, exploiting the initial concentric dispersion of the Reformation to use distance to Wittenberg as an instrument for Protestantism. We find that Protestantism indeed led to higher economic prosperity, but also to better education. Our results are consistent with Protestants' higher literacy accounting for most of the gap in economic prosperity. (c) 2009 by the President and Fellows of Harvard College and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology..

Date: 2009
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Working Paper: Was Weber Wrong? A Human Capital Theory of Protestant Economic History (2007) Downloads
Working Paper: Was Weber Wrong? A Human Capital Theory of Protestant Economic History (2007) Downloads
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