Abstract
As late as 1750, Portugal had a high output per head by Western European standards. Yet just a century later, Portugal was this region’s poorest country. In this paper we show that the discovery of massive quantities of gold in Brazil over the eighteenth century played a key role in the long-run development of Portugal. The country suffered from an economic and political resource curse. A counterfactual based on synthetic control methods suggests that by 1800 Portugal’s GDP per capita was 40 percent lower than it would have been without its endowment of Brazilian gold
Original language | English |
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Journal | Journal of Economic History |
Publication status | Accepted/In press - 22 May 2024 |
Keywords
- Dutch disease
- resource curse
- early modern Portugal
- the Little Divergence