Wealth Accumulation and Distribution in the Midwest in the Late Nineteenth Century |
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Authors: | Mary Eschelbach Gregson |
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Affiliation: | Department of Economics, Knox College |
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Abstract: | It is well known that early settlers on the frontier reaped the benefits of development as population grew, especially through capital gains on real estate. But population turnover—so pervasive in the rural north in the nineteenth century as well as in contemporary settlement economies—also afforded early settlers an advantage: they knew local soil and market conditions better than those who settled later. Such location-specific human capital augmented the incomes, and therefore the wealth, of early settlers. Early settlers in Missouri had higher rates of wealth accumulation than later arrivals, and the contribution of location-specific human capital was at least equal to the contribution of capital gains. |
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