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The Distribution of Land in Luxembourg (1766–1872): Family-Level Wealth Persistence in the Midst of Institutional Change

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 November 2024

Sonia Schifano*
Affiliation:
Postdoctoral Researcher, Università Commerciale Luigi Bocconi, Via Roengten 1, 20136 Milano (Italy).
Antoine Paccoud
Affiliation:
Research Scientist, Luxembourg Institute of Socio-Economic Research (LISER), 11, Porte des Sciences, Maison des Sciences Humaines, L-4366 Esch-sur-Alzette/ Belval (Luxembourg). E-mail: Antoine.Paccoud@liser.lu.
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Abstract

The paper analyzes family-level wealth inequality and social mobility in Dudelange (Luxembourg) over five generations between 1766 and 1872, a period that saw the end of feudal social relations. While the integration of Luxembourg into the French revolutionary regime produced a reduction in the Gini coefficient for the ownership of land, the social mobility analysis reveals a relative stability of family positions within the land-wealth distribution throughout the period. This shows that family-level transmission mechanisms limit social mobility and strongly advantage those with ancestors owning property wealth, even when there are significant changes in the organization of property relations.

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Type
Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the Economic History Association
Figure 0

TABLE 1 MAIN VARIABLE OVER DATASETS

Figure 1

TABLE 2 LINKS BETWEEN DECLARANTS AND PAULY (2014)

Figure 2

FIGURE 1 INVERSE HYPERBOLIC SINE TRANSFORMATION OF THE WEALTH DISTRIBUTIONS, 1766–1842–1872Note: The Gini coefficient for the 1766, 1842, and 1872 are respectively 0.84, 0.70, and 0.69Sources: The authors used the distribution of land in 1766, 1842, and 1872 generated from the Marie Therese Cadastre of 1766 and the land registries of 1842 and 1872 to create this graph.

Figure 3

TABLE 3 GINI COEFFICIENTS FOR DIFFERENT SAMPLE SPECIFICATIONS: INCLUDING OR EXCLUDING DECLARANTS WITH NULL WEALTH (0S) IN 1766 AND/OR THOSE NOT RESIDING IN DUDELANGE

Figure 4

TABLE 4 SHARE OF THE DISTRIBUTION OF LAND WEALTH, BY DECILES, IN DUDELANGE 1766–1842–1872

Figure 5

TABLE 5 SUMMARY STATISTICS ORIGINAL SAMPLE

Figure 6

TABLE 6 SUMMARY STATISTICS OF THE SELECTED GENERATIONAL SAMPLE

Figure 7

FIGURE 2 LORENZ CURVES FOR THE DISTRIBUTION OF LAND-BASED WEALTH 1766, 1842, AND 1872Sources: The authors used the distribution of land in 1766, 1842, and 1872 generated from the Marie Therese Cadastre of 1766 and the land registries of 1842 and 1872 to compute the Lorenz curves.

Figure 8

TABLE 7 REGRESSION RESULTS: RANK ANALYSIS, GENERATIONAL ADJUSTMENT, AND STANDARDIZATION

Figure 9

FIGURE 3 ESTIMATED COEFFICIENTSSources: The authors analyzed the distribution of land in 1766, 1842, and 1872 generated from the Marie Therese Cadastre of 1766 and the land registries of 1842 and 1872. The graph shows the coefficients of the average wealth of ancestors, and they compare these coefficients when the regression is done using only the ancestors in 1766, only the ancestors in 1842, and both.

Figure 10

TABLE 8 REGRESSION RESULTS: ANALYSIS BY QUARTILE OF THE DISTRIBUTION

Figure 11

TABLE 9 SOCIAL MOBILITY TABLE 1766–1842, 1842–1872

Figure 12

TABLE 10 RANK-RANK REGRESSION BETWEEN 1842 DESCENDANTS WITH 1766 ANCESTORS, AND 1872 DESCENDANTS WITH 1842 ANCESTORS

Figure 13

FIGURE 4 INFLUENCE FUNCTIONS FOR THE GINI COEFFICIENT OF NET WORTHSource: Authors analysis based on Firpo, Fortin, and Lemieux (2018).

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