Arresting the Sword of Damocles: The transition to the post-Malthusian era in Denmark

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.eeh.2021.101437Get rights and content
Under a Creative Commons license
open access

Abstract

The Malthusian model is the subject of a fierce debate within economic history. Although the positive causal relationship postulated from living standards to population growth is relatively uncontroversial for preindustrial societies, this cannot be said for the other key relationship, diminishing returns due to fixed supplies of land. We argue that Denmark, which was characterized by extreme resource and environmental constraints until the final decades of the eighteenth century, provides an ideal setting for testing whether any society was ever truly Malthusian. We employ a cointegrated VAR model on Danish data from 1731 to 1800, finding evidence for diminishing returns until ca. 1775. Yet this relationship disappears in the late-eighteenth century, consistent with an increasing pace of technological progress and the emergence of what Unified Growth Theory has termed the “post-Malthusian” era.

Keywords

Cointegration
Denmark
Malthusian
post-Malthusian

JEL classification

J1
N33
O4

Cited by (0)

We would like to thank conference and seminar participants for helpful comments and suggestions. This work was made possible by a grant from Independent Research Fund Denmark (grant no. DFF - 1327-00069).