Growing collectivism: irrigation, group conformity and technological divergence

This paper examines whether collaboration within groups in pre-industrial agriculture favored the emergence of collectivist rather than individualist cultures. I document that societies whose ancestors jointly practiced irrigation agriculture historically have stronger collectivist norms today. This...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of economic growth (Boston, Mass.) Mass.), 2020-06, Vol.25 (2), p.147-193
1. Verfasser: Buggle, Johannes C.
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description This paper examines whether collaboration within groups in pre-industrial agriculture favored the emergence of collectivist rather than individualist cultures. I document that societies whose ancestors jointly practiced irrigation agriculture historically have stronger collectivist norms today. This finding holds across countries, sub-national districts within countries, and migrants, and is robust to instrumenting the historical adoption of irrigation by its geographic suitability. In addition, I find evidence for a culturally-embodied effect of irrigation agriculture on economic behavior. Descendants of irrigation societies innovate less today, and are more likely to work in routine-intensive occupations, even when they live outside their ancestral homelands. Together, my results suggest that historical differences in the need to act collectively have contributed to the global divergence of culture and technology.
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source Business Source Complete; JSTOR Archive Collection A-Z Listing; SpringerLink Journals - AutoHoldings
subjects Agriculture
Conformity
Descendants
Economic behavior
Economic Growth
Economics
Economics and Finance
Homelands
Individualism
International Economics
Irrigation
Macroeconomics/Monetary Economics//Financial Economics
Migrants
Occupations
Suitability
Technology
title Growing collectivism: irrigation, group conformity and technological divergence
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