Working Paper

Devotion and Development: Religiosity, Education, and Economic Progress in 19th-Century France

Mara P. Squicciarini
CESifo, Munich, 2019

CESifo Working Paper No. 7768

This paper studies when religion can hamper diffusion of knowledge and economic development, and through which mechanism. I examine Catholicism in France during the Second Industrial Revolution (1870–1914). In this period, technology became skill-intensive, leading to the introduction of technical education in primary schools. I find that more religious locations had lower economic development after 1870. Schooling appears to be the key mechanism: more religious areas saw a slower adoption of the technical curriculum and a push for religious education. In turn, religious education was negatively associated with industrial development 10 to 15 years later, when schoolchildren entered the labor market.

CESifo Category
Economics of Education
Keywords: human capital, religiosity, industrialization
JEL Classification: J240, N130, Z120