二战破坏对德国私人财富的长期影响

The long-term implications of destruction during the Second World War on private wealth in Germany

Journal of Economic Growth · 2024
被引 0
人大 AABS 3

中文导读

利用二战期间西德1739个城市的破坏数据与21世纪初的个人财富微观数据,发现出生在严重受损城市的个人财富至今仍低约10%,且父母出生地的破坏对后代财富有显著负面影响。

Abstract

Abstract By the end of the Second World War, an estimated 20% of the West German housing stock had been destroyed. Building on a theoretical life-cycle model, this paper examines the persistent consequences of the war for individual wealth across generations. As our empirical basis, we link a unique historical dataset on the levels of wartime destruction in 1739 West German cities with micro data on individual wealth at the beginning of the twenty-first century from the German Socio-Economic Panel. Among individuals born in cities or villages that were badly damaged during the Second World War, wealth is still about 10% lower today. Similarly, the destruction of parental birthplace has significant negative implications for the wealth of their descendants. These negative implications are robust after controlling for a rich set of pre-war regional and city-level control variables. In complementary empirical exercises, we study potential channels such as inheritances, health, and education, through which the wartime destruction could have affected wealth accumulation across generations.

二战破坏私人财富代际传递德国