Michele Rosenberg (University of Essex) presented a paper entitled “Factory Location: Resistance to Technology Adoption and Local Institutions”, co-authored with Federico Curci, at the Paris-Saclay Economics seminar on Thursday, September 28th.

Abstract:

This paper studies technology adoption and factory location in England during the Industrial Revolution. First, we document a negative relationship between industrialization in the 19th century and pre-industrial economic activities. Second, we show that while city-level self-governing institutions promoted early economic growth, these cities failed to adopt the new industrial technologies during the 19th century. We argue that because local self-governance led to the development of representative institutions, these facilitated collective action and enabled workers threatened by labor mechanization to resist technology adoption. Higher resistance to technology adoption, in turn, resulted in the relocation of economic activities away from traditional centers of production.

Link to seminar web page