Pandemics Change Cities: Municipal Spending and Voter Extremism in Germany, 1918-1933

Kristian S. Blickle
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引用次数: 19

Abstract

We merge several historical data sets from Germany to show that influenza mortality in 1918-1920 is correlated with societal changes, as measured by municipal spending and city-level extremist voting, in the subsequent decade. First, influenza deaths are associated with lower per capita spending, especially on services consumed by the young. Second, influenza deaths are correlated with the share of votes received by extremist parties in 1932 and 1933. Our election results are robust to controlling for city spending, demographics, war-related population changes, city-level wages, and regional unemployment, and to instrumenting influenza mortality. We conjecture that our findings may be the consequence of long-term societal changes brought about by a pandemic.
流行病改变城市:1918-1933年德国的市政支出和选民极端主义
我们合并了来自德国的几个历史数据集,以显示1918-1920年的流感死亡率与随后十年中市政支出和城市极端主义投票的社会变化相关。首先,流感死亡与较低的人均支出有关,特别是在年轻人消费的服务方面。其次,1932年和1933年,流感死亡人数与极端主义政党获得的选票比例相关。我们的选举结果在控制城市支出、人口统计、与战争有关的人口变化、城市水平工资和地区失业率以及测量流感死亡率方面是稳健的。我们推测,我们的发现可能是流行病带来的长期社会变化的结果。
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