饥荒、不平等与冲突

Famine, Inequality, and Conflict

Journal of the European Economic Association · 2022
被引 12
人大 AABS 4

中文导读

利用芬兰新历史数据,研究1866-1868年饥荒如何加剧土地与收入不平等,进而影响1918年内战中的暴动参与,并最终推动土地再分配与选举权改革。

Abstract

Abstract This paper employs newly collected historical data from Finland to present evidence of historically contingent, long-run consequences of a famine. We document high levels of local inequality in terms of income and land distribution until a violent uprising in 1918. These inequalities partly originated from the famine of 1866–1868, which increased the concentration of land and power to large landowners. We further show that regions with more exposure to the famine had more labor coercion by the early 1900s. These inner tensions led to violent conflict following the Russian Revolution and the Finnish independence from the Russian Empire. Using microdata on all the casualties of the 1918 Finnish Civil War, we demonstrate that the famine plausibly contributed to local insurgency participation through these factors. Although unsuccessful in replacing the government, the insurgency led to significant policy changes, including radical land redistribution and a full extension of the franchise. These national reforms led to a more drastic shift toward equality in locations more affected by the famine with greater pre-conflict inequality. Our findings highlight how historical shocks can have large and long-lasting, but not straightforward impacts.

芬兰饥荒不平等内战土地改革