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Passenger Shipping Cartels and Their Effect on Trans-Atlantic Migration

George Deltas1; Richard Sicotte2; Peter Tomczak3

1 University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign · 2 University of Vermont · 3 Baker & McKenzie LLP

The Review of Economics and Statistics 2008

We investigate the impact of passenger shipping cartels on trans-Atlantic migration during the early twentieth century. We assemble from primary sources a detailed database of passenger flows and cartel operations and show that cartel operation reduced migratory flows by approximately 20% to 25%. Further, we show that there was no strong intertemporal substitution in migration to North America (at least in the short run) and, therefore, that the effects of cartel operation were not “undone” by later migration. Lastly, we find that cartel operation had no appreciable effect on the variability of migration flows, providing evidence against the notion that unfettered competition was destabilizing to turn-of-the-century transportation markets.

DOI
10.1162/rest.90.1.119
Volume
90 (1)
Pages
119-133
Language
en
Export
BibTeX
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