6533b7d3fe1ef96bd126023e

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Income inequality and famine mortality: Evidence from the Finnish famine of the 1860s

Miikka Voutilainen

subject

kuolleisuusEconomics and EconometricsHistoryinequalityInequalitypovertymedia_common.quotation_subject060104 historyväestöhistoriaEconomic inequality0502 economics and businessEconomics0601 history and archaeologynälänhätä050207 economicsFinlandköyhyysmedia_common2. Zero hungerPoverty05 social sciences1. No povertytaloushistoria06 humanities and the artseriarvoisuus8. Economic growthsuuret nälkävuodetFaminefaminesDemographic economicsnineteenth century

description

This article examines whether economic inequality intensified the adverse effects of harvest, price, and income shocks during a famine. Using a parish-level longitudinal dataset from the Finnish famine of the 1860s, it shows that a substantial proportion of the excess mortality experienced during the famine resulted from a decline in agricultural production, a decline in incomes, and a surge in food prices. The findings indicate that the adverse effects of food output fluctuations were intensified by increasing income inequality and decreasing average income, while the market-transmitted shocks were weakened by a contraction of disposable income. The results are corroborated with multiple alternative estimation techniques, including the introduction of spatial spill-overs. The results show that even a pre-industrial famine affecting an impoverished society was meaningfully defined by the distribution of incomes. peerReviewed

https://doi.org/10.1111/ehr.13095