On the Dispensability of New Transportation Technologies: Evidence from the Heterogeneous Impact of Railroads in Nigeria
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Abstract
Exploring heterogeneity in the impact of a technology is a first step towards understanding conditions
under which this technology is conducive to economic development. This article shows that colonial
railroads in Nigeria have large long-lasting impacts on individual and local development in the North,
but virtually no impact in the South neither in the short run nor in the long run. This heterogeneous
impact of the railway can be accounted for by the distance to ports of export. We highlight the fact that
the railway had no impact in areas that had access to ports of export, thanks to their proximity to the
coast and to their use of waterways, and that those areas barely adopted the railway as it did not reduce
their shipping costs. Our analyses rule out the possibility that the heterogeneous impacts are driven by
cohort effects, presence of major roads, early cities, or missionary activity, or by crude oil production.
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Keywords
impact heterogeneity, colonial investments, railway, Africa, long-run effects, development, Nigeria
