This caught my eye.... as explained from an historical and economic 
"Jewish-friendly" perspective....

http://www.pbs.org/newshour/businessdesk/2013/04/the-chosen-few-a-new-explanati.html

*By Maristella Botticini and Zvi Eckstein*


*A note from Paul Solman: Nine years ago, someone sent me an academic paper 
that put forward a radically new explanation of why Jews have been so 
successful economically. Written by economists Maristella Botticini and Zvi 
Eckstein, the paper explained Jewish success in terms of early literacy in 
the wake of Rome's destruction of the Temple in 70 C.E. and the subsequent 
dispersion of Jews throughout the Roman empire - Jews who had to rely on 
their own rabbis and synagogues to sustain their religion instead of the 
high priests in Jerusalem.*

*You may know a similar story about the Protestant Reformation: the 
bypassing of the Catholic clergy and their Latin liturgy for actual reading 
of Scripture in native languages and the eventual material benefits of 
doing so. Why is Northern Europe -- Germany, Holland, England, Sweden -- so 
much more prosperous than Southern Europe: Portugal, Italy, Greece, Spain? 
Why do the latter owe the former instead of the other way around? Might it 
have something to do with the Protestant legacy of the North, the Catholic 
legacy of the South?*

*Botticini and Eckstein have spent their careers studying not Christianity, 
but Judaism. And they have now come out with a book elaborating on their 
novel thesis: "The Chosen Few: How Education Shaped Jewish History, 
70-1492," published by the Princeton University Press.*
------------------------------

*Maristella Botticini and Zvi Eckstein*: Imagine a dinner conversation in a 
New York or Milan or Tel Aviv restaurant in which three people--an Israeli, 
an American, and a European -- ask to each other: "Why are so many Jews 
urban dwellers rather than farmers? Why are Jews primarily engaged in 
trade, commerce, entrepreneurial activities, finance, law, medicine, and 
scholarship? And why have the Jewish people experienced one of the longest 
and most scattered diasporas in history, along with a steep demographic 
decline?" 

Most likely, the standard answers they would suggest would be along these 
lines: "The Jews are not farmers because their ancestors were prohibited 
from owning land in the Middle Ages." "They became moneylenders, bankers, 
and financiers because during the medieval period Christians were banned 
from lending money at interest, so the Jews filled in that role." "The 
Jewish population dispersed worldwide and declined in numbers as a result 
of endless massacres."

Imagine now that two economists (us) seated at a nearby table, after 
listening to this conversation, tell the three people who are having this 
lively debate: "Are you sure that your explanations are correct? You should 
read this new book, ours, "The Chosen Few: How Education Shaped Jewish 
History," and you would learn that when one looks over the 15 centuries 
spanning from 70 C.E. to 1492, these oft-given answers that you are 
suggesting seem at odds with the historical facts. This book provides you 
with a novel explanation of why the Jews are the people they are today -- a 
comparatively small population of economically successful and 
intellectually prominent individuals."

Suppose you are like one of the three people in the story above and you 
wonder why you should follow the advice of the two economists. There are 
many books that have studied the history of the Jewish people and have 
addressed those fascinating questions. What's really special about this 
one? 

To understand the spirit of the study we've undertaken, one should borrow 
two tools: a magnifying glass and a telescope. With the magnifying glass, 
the reader will be like a historian, who focuses on a place and a time 
period, painstakingly digs through the sources, and carefully documenting 
the historical trajectory of the Jews there. A thousand such scholars will 
offer a detailed description of the history of the Jews in hundreds of 
locales throughout history. 

But with the telescope, the reader will be like an economist, who assembles 
and painstakingly compares the information offered by the works of the 
historians, creates a complete picture of the economic and demographic 
history of the Jewish people over 15 centuries, and then uses the powerful 
tools of economic reasoning and logic to address one of the most 
fundamental questions in Jewish history: 

Why are the Jews, a relatively small population, specialized in the most 
skilled and economically profitable occupations? 

In doing so, the "alliance" of the historians and the economists offers a 
completely novel interpretation of the historical trajectory of the Jews 
from 70 to 1492. In turn, this may help us understand several features of 
the history of the Jewish people from 1500 up to today, including the 
successful performance of the Israeli economy despite the recent economic 
crisis.

The journey of "The Chosen Few" begins in Jerusalem, following the 
destruction of the Second Temple in the year 70, continues in the Galilee 
during the first and second centuries, moves to Babylon in Mesopotamia 
during the fourth and fifth centuries, and then to Baghdad in the second 
half of the first millennium when the Muslim Abbasid empire reaches its 
economic and intellectual apex. 

At the turn of the millennium, the historical voyage reaches Cairo, 
Constantinople, and Cordoba, and soon after the whole of western and 
southern Europe, then turns back to Baghdad in the 1250s during the Mongol 
conquest of the Middle East before ending in Seville in 1492.

During these 15 centuries, a profound transformation of Judaism coupled 
with three historic encounters of the Jews -- with Rome, with Islam, and 
with the Mongol Conquest -- shaped the economic and demographic history of 
the Jewish people in a unique and long-lasting way up to today.

Let's first start describing the profound transformation of Judaism at the 
beginning of the first millennium, which has been amply documented by 
scholarly works. In the centuries before 70, the core of Judaism was 
centered around two pillars: the Temple in Jerusalem, in which sacrifices 
were performed by a small elite of high priests, and the reading and the 
study of the Written Torah, which was also restricted to a small elite of 
rabbis and scholars. (It was the power of this elite that the Jew Yeshua 
ben Josef, later know as Jesus Christ, so often decried.)

The destruction of the Temple in 70 at the end of the first Jewish-Roman 
war was the first of the three external events which permanently shaped the 
history of the Jewish people. Momentously, it canceled one of the two 
pillars of Judaism, shifting the religious leadership within the Jewish 
community from the high priests in Jerusalem to a much more widely 
dispersed community of rabbis and scholars. In so doing, it transformed 
Judaism into a religion whose main norm required every Jewish man to read 
and to study the Torah in Hebrew himself and, even more radically, to send 
his sons from the age of six or seven to primary school or synagogue to 
learn to do the same. 

In the world of universal illiteracy, as it was the world at the beginning 
of the first millennium, this was an absolutely revolutionary 
transformation. At that time, no other religion had a similar norm as a 
membership requirement for its followers, and no state or empire had 
anything like laws imposing compulsory education or universal literacy for 
its citizens. The unexpected consequences of this change in the religious 
norm within Judaism would unfold in the subsequent centuries.

To understand what happened to the Jewish people in the eight centuries 
after 70, "The Chosen Few" asks the reader to travel back in time to a 
village in the Galilee around the year 200. What would the reader see? 

They would see Jewish farmers, some rich, some poor who have to decide 
whether to send their children to primary school as their rabbis tell them 
to do. Some farmers are very attached to Judaism and willing to obey the 
norms of their religion, others are not very devout and consider whether or 
not to convert to another religion. In this rural economy, educating the 
children as Judaism requires is a cost, but brings no economic benefits 
because literacy does not make a farmer more productive or wealthier. 

Given this situation, what would economic logic predict? What would likely 
happen to Judaism and the Jewish people? Given a high preference for 
religious affiliation, some Jews will educate their children and will keep 
their attachment to their religion. Other Jews, however, will prefer their 
material well-being and will *not* educate their children. Furthermore, a 
portion of this latter group will likely convert to other religions with 
less demanding requirements. And so, over time, even absent wars or other 
demographic shocks, the size of the Jewish population will shrink because 
of this process of conversions.

But are the predictions of the economic theory consistent with what really 
happened to the Jews during the first millennium? The historical evidence 
assembled in our book says yes. The implementation of this new religious 
norm within Judaism during the Talmud era (third to sixth centuries) 
determined two major patterns from 70 C.E. to the early 7th century.

The first of these trends was the growth and spread of literacy among the 
predominantly rural Jewish population. The second: a slow but significant 
process of conversion out of Judaism (mainly into Christianity) which, 
caused a significant fall in the Jewish population -- from 5 to 5.5 million 
circa 65 to roughly 1.2 million circa 650. War-related massacres and 
epidemics contributed to this drastic drop, but they cannot by themselves 
explain it.

At the beginning of the 7th century, the Jews experienced their second 
major historic encounter -- this time with Islam. In the two centuries 
after the death of Mohammed, in 632, the Muslim Umayyad and, later, Abbasid 
caliphs, established a vast empire stretching from the Iberian Peninsula to 
India and China, with a common language (Arabic), religion (Islam), laws, 
and institutions. Concomitant with the ascent of this empire, agricultural 
productivity grew, new industries developed, commerce greatly expanded, and 
new cities and towns developed. These changes vastly increased the demand 
for skilled and literate occupations in the newly established urban empire. 

How did this affect world Jewry? Between 750 and 900, almost all the Jews 
in Mesopotamia and Persia -- nearly 75 percent of the world's remaining 1.2 
million Jews -- left agriculture, moved to the cities and towns of the 
newly established Abbasid Empire, and entered myriad skilled occupations 
that provided higher earnings than as farmers. Agriculture, the typical 
occupation of the Jewish people in the days of Josephus in the first 
century, was no longer their typical occupation seven to eight centuries 
later.

This occupational transition occurred at a time in which there were no 
legal restrictions on Jewish land ownership. The Jews could and did own 
land in the many locations of the vast Abbasid Muslim Empire. And yet, Jews 
moved away from farming. This is of vital importance. 

Modern explanations of why the Jews became a population of craftsmen, 
traders, shopkeepers, bankers, scholars, and physicians have relied on 
supposed economic or legal restrictions. But these do not pass the test of 
the historical evidence. 

This is one of our main and novel messages: mass Jewish literacy was key. 
It enabled Jews -- *incentivized* Jews -- to abandon agriculture as their 
main occupation and profitably migrate to Yemen, Syria, Egypt, and the 
Maghreb. 

The tide of migrations of Jews in search of business opportunities also 
reached Christian Europe. Migrations of Jews within and from the lands of 
the Byzantine Empire, which included southern Italy, may have set the 
foundations, via Italy, for much of European Jewry. Similarly, Jews from 
Egypt and the Maghreb settled in the Iberian Peninsula, and later, in 
Sicily and parts of southern Italy.

*The key message of "The Chosen Few" is that the literacy of the Jewish 
people, coupled with a set of contract-enforcement institutions developed 
during the five centuries after the destruction of the Second Temple, gave 
the Jews a comparative advantage in occupations such as crafts, trade, and 
moneylending* -- occupations that benefited from literacy, 
contract-enforcement mechanisms, and networking and provided high earnings. 

Once the Jews were engaged in these occupations, there was no economic 
pressure to convert, which is consistent with the fact that the Jewish 
population, which had shrunk so dramatically in earlier times, grew 
slightly from the 7th to the 12th centuries. 

Moreover, this comparative advantage fostered the voluntary diaspora of the 
Jews during the early middle ages in search of worldwide opportunities in 
crafts, trade, commerce, moneylending, banking, finance, and medicine.

This in turn would explain why the Jews, at this point in history, became 
so successful in occupations related to credit and financial markets. 
Already during the 12th and 13th centuries, moneylending was the occupation 
par excellence of the Jews in England, France, and Germany, and one of the 
main professions of the Jews in the Iberian Peninsula, Italy, and other 
locations in western Europe. 

A popular view contends that both their exclusion from craft and merchant 
guilds and usury bans on Muslims and Christians segregated European Jews 
into moneylending during the Middle Ages. But our study shows, with 
evidence we have come upon during more than a decade of research, that this 
argument is simply untenable. 

Instead, we have been compelled to offer an alternative and new 
explanation, consistent with the historical record: the Jews in medieval 
Europe voluntarily entered and later specialized in moneylending and 
banking because they had the key assets for being successful players in 
credit markets: 

   - capital already accumulated as craftsmen and traders, 
   - networking abilities because they lived in many locations, could 
   easily communicate with and alert one another as to the best buying and 
   selling opportunities, and 
   - literacy, numeracy, and contract-enforcement institutions -- "gifts" 
   that their religion has given them -- gave them an advantage over 
   competitors. 

With these assets, small wonder that a significant number of Jews 
specialized in the most profitable occupation that depended on literacy and 
numeracy: finance. In this sector they worked for many centuries. As they 
specialized, just as Adam Smith would have predicted, they honed their 
craft, giving them a competitive advantage, right up to the present.

But what if the economy and society in which the Jews lived, suddenly 
ceased being urban and commercially-oriented and turned agrarian and rural, 
reverting to the environment in which Judaism had found itself centuries 
earlier?

The third historic encounter of the Jews -- this time with the Mongol 
conquest of the Middle East -- offers the possibility to answer this 
question. The Mongol invasion of Persia and Mesopotamia began in 1219 and 
culminated in the razing of Baghdad in 1258. It contributed to the demise 
of the urban and commercial economy of the Abbasid Empire and brought the 
economies of Mesopotamia and Persia back to an agrarian and pastoral stage 
for a long period. 

As a consequence, a certain proportion of Persian, Mesopotamian, and then 
Egyptian, and Syrian Jewry abandoned Judaism. Its religious norms, 
especially the one requiring fathers to educate their sons, had once again 
become a costly religious sacrifice with no economic return. And so a 
number of Jews converted to Islam. 

Once again, persecutions, massacres, and plagues (e.g., the Black Death of 
1348) took a toll on the Jewish population in these regions and in western 
Europe. But the voluntary conversions of Jews in the Middle East and North 
Africa, we argue, help explain why world Jewry reached its lowest level by 
the end of the 15th century. 

The same mechanism that explains the decline of the Jewish population in 
the six centuries after the destruction of the Second Temple, that is, 
accounts for the decline of the Jewish communities of the Middle East in 
the two centuries following the Mongol shock.

None of this was planned. The rabbis and scholars who transformed Judaism 
into a religion of literacy during the first centuries of the first 
millennium, could not have foreseen the profound impact of their decision 
to make every Jewish man capable of reading and studying the Torah (and, 
later, the Mishna, the Talmud, and other religious texts). 

However, an apparently odd choice of religious norm--the enforcement of 
literacy in a mostly illiterate, agrarian world, potentially risky in that 
the process of conversions could make Judaism too costly and thus 
disappear--turned out to be the lever of the Jewish economic success and 
intellectual prominence in the subsequent centuries up to today. This is 
the overall novel message of "The Chosen Few." 
------------------------------

*Maristella Botticini is professor of economics, as well as director and 
fellow of the Innocenzo Gasparini Institute for Economic Research (IGIER), 
at Bocconi University in Milan.* 

*Zvi Eckstein is the Mario Henrique Simonson Chair in Labor Economics at 
Tel Aviv University and professor and dean of the School of Economics at 
IDC Herzliya in Herzliya, Israel.*

*Addressing the puzzles that punctuate Jewish history from 1492 to today is 
the task of the next journey, which the authors will take in their next 
book, "The Chosen Many."*
*This entry is cross-posted on the 
Rundown<http://www.pbs.org/newshour/rundown/>-- NewsHour's blog of news and 
insight. Follow 
Paul on Twitter. <http://twitter.com/paulsolman>* 

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