The Economic History Review

Club goods and inefficient institutions: why Danzig and Lübeck failed in the early modern period

Volume 62 Issue 3
Home > The Economic History Review > Club goods and inefficient institutions: why Danzig and Lübeck failed in the early modern period
Pages: 604-628Authors: ERIK LINDBERG
Published online: July 7, 2009DOI: 10.1111/j.1468-0289.2009.00469.x

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This article uses club theory to explain why two major medieval commercial centres declined in the early modern period. Lubeck and Danzig illuminate the difficulties experienced by old-style European towns where early modern guilds (and other privileged ‘corporations’) had a lot of political influence in making the transition to the new style of north-west European cities such as Amsterdam and Hamburg. The article refutes theories proposing that the special privileges awarded to a merchant elite enhanced economic growth; instead, it is argued that those privileges gave rise to ‘club goods’ that were beneficial only to a small number of merchants and were provided at the expense of society at large, resulting in economic decline.

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