Ireland in a Danish mirror: A microlevel comparison of the productivity of Danish and Irish creameries before the First World War

Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Files
EHES_219.pdf(808.86 KB)
Published Version
Date
2021-11
Authors
McLaughlin, Eoin
Sharp, Paul
Tsoukli, Xanthi
Vedel, Christian
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
European Historical Economics Society
Published Version
Research Projects
Organizational Units
Journal Issue
Abstract
The relative success of the Danish and failure of the Irish dairy industries before the First World War is often contrasted given their competition for the lucrative British butter market. The traditional narrative implicitly assumes that Ireland failed because it was unsuccessful at adopting the cooperative institution, and that Irish cooperatives were not as efficient as their Danish counterparts, despite having been explicitly modelled on them. This assumption is, however, untested at the ‘firm’ level. We seek to rectify this through the analysis of a large microlevel database of creameries in both countries over the period 1898-1903. Using Stochastic Frontier Analysis (SFA), a standard methodology in modern productivity studies, we find no evidence for significant productivity differences on average, although there was a much larger variance in Ireland. This nuances the idea that the Irish were unable to cooperate successfully, although some creameries were certainly productivity laggards.
Description
EHES Working Paper
Keywords
Dairying , Denmark , Ireland , Microdata , Productivity
Citation
McLaughlin, E., Sharp, P., Tsoukli, X. and Vedel, C. (2021) 'Ireland in a Danish mirror: A microlevel comparison of the productivity of Danish and Irish creameries before the First World War', European Historical Economics Society Working Paper No. 219, pp. 1-18. Available at: http://www.ehes.org/EHES_219.pdf (Accessed: 1 December 2021)
Link to publisher’s version
Copyright
© 2021, the Authors. The material presented in the EHES Working Paper Series is property of the authors and should be quoted as such. The views expressed in this Paper are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent the views of the EHES or its members.