Derechos:
Atribución-NoComercial-SinDerivadas 3.0 España
Resumen:
The aim of this paper is to present and discuss the pattern of regional inequality
in Italy, from the end of the nineteenth century until our days. Value added estimates for the Italian regions, in benchmark years from 1891 until 1951, are
linked to those frThe aim of this paper is to present and discuss the pattern of regional inequality
in Italy, from the end of the nineteenth century until our days. Value added estimates for the Italian regions, in benchmark years from 1891 until 1951, are
linked to those from official figures available from 1971, in order to offer a
long-term picture. It is worth anticipating that 1891-1951 estimates are not entirely satisfactory yet (sources and methodologies used for 1891-1951 estimates are explained in some detail in the final appendix). However, at the present stage of research they are comparable to those available for other countries; further refinements can hardly be produced in the short run, while it
seems reasonable to think that they would not change significantly the overall pattern. In short, present estimates allow us to set the Italian case within the international context and to draw the basic lines of a long-term picture.[+][-]