Long-Run Cultural Divergence: Evidence From the Neolithic Revolution
Sammanfattning
This paper investigates the long-run infuence of the Neolithic Revolution on contemporary cultural norms and institutions as reflected in the dimension of collectivism-individualism. We outline an agricultural origins-model of cultural divergence where we claim that the advent of farming in a core region was characterized by collectivist values and eventually triggered the out-migration of individualistic farmers towards more and more peripheral areas. This migration pattern caused the initial cultural
divergence, which remained persistent over generations. The key mechanism is demonstrated
in an extended Malthusian growth model that explicitly models cultural dynamics and a migration choice for individualistic farmers. Using detailed data on the date of adoption of Neolithic agriculture among Western regions and countries, the
empirical findings show that the regions which adopted agriculture early also value obedience more and feel less in control of their lives. They have also had very little experience of democracy during the last century. The findings add to the literature
by suggesting the possibility of extremely long lasting norms and beliefs infuencing today's socioeconomic outcomes.
Övrig beskrivning
JEL: N50, O43
Samlingar
Fil(er)
Datum
2015-05Författare
Olsson, Ola
Paik, Christopher
Nyckelord
Neolithic agriculture
comparative development
Western reversal
Publikationstyp
report
ISSN
1403-2465
Serie/rapportnr.
Working Papers in Economics
620
Språk
eng