The Roots of Ethnic Diversity
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Date
2007-12-14T07:52:55Z
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Abstract
The level of ethnic diversity is believed to have significant consequences
for economic and political development within countries. In this article,
we provide a theoretical and empirical analysis of the determinants of
ethnic diversity in the world. We introduce a model of cultural and ge-
netic drift where new ethnic groups endogenously emerge among periph-
eral populations as a response to an insufficient supply of public goods.
In line with our model, we find that the duration of human settlements
has a strong positive association with ethnic diversity. Ethnic diversity
decreases with the length of modern state experience and with distance
from the equator. Both "primordial" and "constructivist" hypotheses of
ethnic fractionalization thus receive some support by our analysis.
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Keywords
ethnicity, ethnic diversity, human origins, JEL Codes: N40, N50, P3