• Micro-level evidence on elite behavior in processes of structural change • Portfolio reallocation across sectors during Italian modernization • Risk perception and expectations shape investment decisions • Role of inclusive institutions in enabling capital reallocation • Milan as a key context of financial and institutional transformation • Complementarity between private accumulation and social redistribution This article examines how processes of structural change reshaped the relationship between private wealth accumulation and public benefit in the nineteenth century, challenging the view that these two logics were inherently in tension. Focusing on the case of the Crivelli, a prominent Milanese aristocratic family, it situates their economic behaviour within a distinctive civic and secular ethos deeply rooted in the mentality, practices, and strategic conduct of Milan’s elite. Rather than conforming to the conventional portrayal of noble households as detached from or resistant to economic modernization, the Crivelli actively engaged with the new opportunities opened by industrialization and financial market development, progressively reallocating a patrimony originally grounded in land toward corporate securities, public debt, and private credit. The study traces these investment decisions, portfolio reallocations, and philanthropic expenditures across half a century of profound institutional, technological, and economic transformation (1853-1901), arguing that micro-level evidence of elite wealth management provides a privileged vantage point for understanding how structural change unfolded in a late-comer economy: how emerging sectors attracted private capital, how risk was perceived and absorbed by private actors, and how shifts in the composition of wealth at the household level fed into the broader capital flows sustaining Italy's long nineteenth-century development. In this perspective, the Crivelli case offers a significant, if historically localized, counterpoint to interpretations of ruling elites as predominantly extractive actors, and highlights the behavioural and institutional mechanisms through which changes in income distribution and capital allocation were mediated within a tradition of engaged and socially responsible urban citizenship.
Luca et al. (Fri,) studied this question.