Flow of Ideas: Economic Societies and the Rise of Useful Knowledge

01 Jul 2025·
Francesco Cinnirella
,
Erik Hornung
Julius Koschnick
Julius Koschnick
· 1 min read
A technical drawing of a threshing machine
Abstract
Economic societies emerged during the late eighteenth century. We argue that these institutions reduced the costs of accessing useful knowledge by adopting, producing, and diffusing new ideas. Combining location information for the universe of 3,300 members across active economic societies in Germany with those of patent holders and World’s Fair exhibitors, we show that regions with more members were more innovative in the late nineteenth century. This long-lasting effect of societies arguably arose through agglomeration economies and localized knowledge spillovers. To support this claim, we provide evidence suggesting an immediate increase in manufacturing, an earlier establishment of vocational schools, and a higher density of highly skilled mechanical workers by the mid-nineteenth century in regions with more members. We also show that regions with members from the same society had higher similarity in patenting, suggesting that social networks facilitated spatial knowledge diffusion and, to some extent, shaped the geography of innovation.
Publication
The Economic Journal
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Julius Koschnick
Authors
Assistant Professor

I am an Assistant Professor and Marie Curie Fellow at the Department of Economics at the University of Southern Denmark (SDU), part of the Danish Institute for Advanced Study (DIAS) and the Historical Economics and Development Group (HEDG).

My research interests include long-run growth, human capital formation, knowledge transmission, and natural language processing.