Discussion paper

DP17925 Testing Marx. Capital Accumulation, Income Inequality, and Socialism in Late Nineteenth-Century Germany

We study the dynamics of capital accumulation, income inequality, capital concentration, and voting up to 1914. Based on new panel data for Prussian regions, we re-evaluate the famous Revisionism Debate between orthodox Marxists and their critics. We show that changes in capital accumulation led to a rise in the capital share and income inequality, as predicted by orthodox Marxists. But against their predictions, this did neither lead to further capital concentration nor to more votes for the socialists. Instead, trade unions and strike activity limited income inequality and fostered political support for socialism, as argued by the Revisionists.

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Citation

Bartels, C, F Kersting and N Wolf (2023), ‘DP17925 Testing Marx. Capital Accumulation, Income Inequality, and Socialism in Late Nineteenth-Century Germany‘, CEPR Discussion Paper No. 17925. CEPR Press, Paris & London. https://cepr.org/publications/dp17925