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The Political Economy of Public Finance and the Industrialization of Prussia, 1815–1866
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 03 February 2011
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At the close of the Napoleonic Wars in 1815 Prussia was an industrial backwater. By the mid 1860's Prussia had achieved a considerable degree of industrialization. In a sense, her economy had “taken off.” The turning point dates from around 1840 and was closely related to railroad building. Before 1840 industrial investment grew haltingly. The combination of inadequate markets and the lack of supporting enterprise made industrial investment—particularly in those lines in which Europe's industrial leader, England, was already specialized—too risky and/or its anticipated yields too low for most potential investors, who preferred to invest in real estate, commerce, and in foreign government bonds. As leading Prussian entrepreneurs argued, the country's industrial development required public investment in river improvements, roads, canals, railroads, banks, and other facilities which would generate external economies and make private investment, for example in metalworking enterprise, more profitable. Theoretically, such public investment could have been financed by curtailing other governmental expenditures, by taxing unproductive consumption, and/or by borrowing. The technical proficiency required by such investments was either domestically available or could be readily borrowed from abroad. Even Prussian political economy, through its interpretation of the Classicists, reflected these conditions and called for state assistance. The will, the means, and a rationale for a program of public investment were at hand: one could truly speak of an abundance of “advantages of backwardness” in Prussia after 1815.
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References
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16 The advent of Frederick William IV in 1840, the industrial success of Belgium, and the increasing recognition by Junker landowners of the advantages of an enlarged German market for their agricultural produce were among the leading factors underlying the change in attitude.
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30 At least they were entitled “railroad loans” and were earmarked for particular railroad projects; , Bergius, Grundsätze, p. 445Google Scholar ; Schwartz and Strutz, I, Book 3, 1023-25. Railroad loans to the amount of 83.2 million thalers were made between 1849 and 1855.
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33 This quasi-quantitative sketch derives from a cursory examination of the English, French, and Prussian governmental bond yield and of Berlin discount-rate behavior over the perio d in question; tables in Spiethoff (cited in n. 2), tables 11 and 12. A more rigorous comparative analysis along these lines might prove rewarding.
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