Between the seventeenth and nineteenth centuries, Northern Europe overtook Southern Europe, a reversal that preceded modern economic growth. I propose an underexplored channel for this transition: the Little Ice Age, a prolonged period of cooling and heightened climate volatility, whose economic impact was geographically uneven. Be- cause agricultural productivity is non-linear in temperature, the same cooling tightened the subsistence constraint much more in colder re- gions. In a Malthusian economy this forced households to work more, and higher labor input accelerated learning-by-doing and induced innovation, raising agricultural productivity. I formalize this mecha- nism in a subsistence labor–leisure model with endogenous knowl- edge accumulation and derive testable predictions. Calibrated sim- ulations show that regions facing greater climatic stress accumulate technology faster and escape the Malthusian trap earlier, reproducing the key features of the Little Divergence.
Essays in Spatial Economics
BADINO, NICOLO'
2026-07-15
Abstract
Between the seventeenth and nineteenth centuries, Northern Europe overtook Southern Europe, a reversal that preceded modern economic growth. I propose an underexplored channel for this transition: the Little Ice Age, a prolonged period of cooling and heightened climate volatility, whose economic impact was geographically uneven. Be- cause agricultural productivity is non-linear in temperature, the same cooling tightened the subsistence constraint much more in colder re- gions. In a Malthusian economy this forced households to work more, and higher labor input accelerated learning-by-doing and induced innovation, raising agricultural productivity. I formalize this mecha- nism in a subsistence labor–leisure model with endogenous knowl- edge accumulation and derive testable predictions. Calibrated sim- ulations show that regions facing greater climatic stress accumulate technology faster and escape the Malthusian trap earlier, reproducing the key features of the Little Divergence.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.



