YALE DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS
Borders, Market Size and Urban growth, the case of Saxon Towns Florian Ploeckl December 2008 Changes in trade institutions, such as the abolishment of tariff
barriers, have a potentially strong impact on economic development. The Zollverein, the
1834 customs union between German states, erased borders in much of central Europe. This
paper investigates the Zollverein's economic impact through a study of urban population
and its growth in the German state of Saxony. A model of the effect of market access on
urban growth is combined with an extensive data set on town populations in Saxony and its
neighbors as well as an improved distance measure based on GIS techniques, which take into
account elevation patterns, roads, and rivers. The results show that Zollverein membership
led to significantly higher growth for towns close to the border with fellow Zollverein
member Thuringia. They also illustrate that natural resources affect town size but not the
growth pattern after the Zollverein. The effects of changes in market access were
reinforced through the impact on market access in other towns and they were stronger for
larger towns as well. Migration was the predominant source of the differential growth
pattern. |