Very interesting article[1], and wonder whether this is applicable to other
countries/regions as well.

Kiran

[1] http://www.economist.com/world/europe/displaystory.cfm?story_id=15731354

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How linguistic variations affect where Germans choose to live
Mar 18th 2010 | BERLIN | From The Economist print edition

FEW Germans now say Appel rather than Apfel (apple) or maken instead of
machen (to make). The north German dialects that use such variants are
mostly dead or dying. But the cultural differences that they reflect still
govern behaviour today, says a paper from the Institute for the Study of
Labour, in Bonn*.

Acting on imperial orders in the 1880s, a linguist called Georg Wenker asked
pupils from 45,000 schools across the new Reich to translate standard German
sentences into local dialect. The results were used to compile an atlas of
linguistic diversity. The new paper shows that Wenker’s dialect regions
still define the comfort zones in which Germans prefer to live. When people
migrate within Germany, they tend to go to places where dialects resemble
those spoken in their home region 120 years ago.

German dialects, formed by geography and political and religious
fragmentation, express deep-seated cultural differences. These persist even
though borders between petty princedoms are invisible (and often no longer
audible). Even small differences count. Swabians share Baden-Württemberg
with Badeners. Both spoke Alemannic dialects. But Swabians, who say Haus
(house), have a bias against living in the neighbouring old grand duchy,
where they say Huus.

That trade is livelier among regions that share a language is well known.
The paper’s authors think they are the first to find a similar effect within
a single language in one country. They measure migration not trade, because
the data are better and cultural factors matter more. The best predictors
are still Wenker’s maps. “Even when we don’t speak dialect, the cultural
territory is still there,” says Alfred Lameli, one of the authors.

Does this confuse cause and effect? Regions may have similar dialects
because earlier generations migrated and their descendants follow suit. To
rule this out, the authors looked at the way communist East Germany weakened
social links that encourage migration. After unification, they found, the
old migration patterns came back, suggesting that migrants respond to
cultural factors more than to social ties. It seems that neither television,
nor the autobahn, nor even the Kaiser, has created a single country in
Germany.


*“Dialects, Cultural Identity, and Economic Exchange” by Oliver Falck,
Stephan Heblich, Alfred Lameli and Jens Südekum, IZA, February 2010

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