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The Protestant Reformation, economic institutions, and development

  • Article
  • Apr 26, 2016
  • #EconomicGrowth #Religion
Jeremiah Dittmar
@JeremiahDittmar
(Author)
Ralf R Meisenzahl
@RalfRMeisenzahl
(Author)
voxeu.org
Read on voxeu.org
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Throughout history, most states have functioned as kleptocracies and not as providers of public goods. This column analyses the diffusion of legal institutions that established Euro... Show More

Throughout history, most states have functioned as kleptocracies and not as providers of public goods. This column analyses the diffusion of legal institutions that established Europe’s first large-scale experiments in mass public education. These institutions originated in Germany during the Protestant Reformation due to popular political mobilisation, but only in around half

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Patrick Collison @PatrickCollison
  • Curated in Growth Collection
"This column analyses the diffusion of legal institutions that established Europe’s first large-scale experiments in mass public education. [...] Cities that formalised these institutions grew faster over the next 200 years, both by attracting and by producing more highly skilled residents."
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