西西里黑手党的起源:柠檬市场

Origins of the Sicilian Mafia: The Market for Lemons

Journal of Economic History · 2017
被引 122 · 同刊同年前 3%
人大 A-ABS 3

中文导读

研究19世纪末西西里黑手党如何因柑橘出口需求激增而兴起,作为保护高利润产业的中介机构,利用1881-1886年议会调查数据证实黑手党与柠檬生产密切相关。

Abstract

In this article, we study the emergence of an extractive institution that hampered economic development in Italy for more than a century: the Sicilian mafia. Since its first appearance in the late 1800s, the reasons behind the rise of the Sicilian mafia have remained a puzzle. In this article, we argue that the mafia arose as a response to an exogenous shock in the demand for oranges and lemons, following Lind's discovery in the late eighteenth century that citrus fruits cured scurvy. More specifically, we claim that mafia appeared in locations where producers made high profits from citrus production for overseas export. Operating in an environment with a weak rule of law, the mafia protected citrus production from predation and acted as intermediaries between producers and exporters. Using original data from a parliamentary inquiry in 1881–1886 on Sicilian towns, the Damiani Inquiry, we show that mafia presence is strongly related to the production of oranges and lemons. The results hold when different data sources and several controls are employed.

西西里黑手党起源柠檬市场制度提取弱法治环境