August 7, 2007 /New York TIMES
In Dusty Archives, a Theory of Affluence

By NICHOLAS WADE

For thousands of years, most people on earth lived in abject poverty,
first as hunters and gatherers, then as peasants or laborers. But with
the Industrial Revolution, some societies traded this ancient poverty
for amazing affluence.

Historians and economists have long struggled to understand how this
transition occurred and why it took place only in some countries. A
scholar who has spent the last 20 years scanning medieval English
archives has now emerged with startling answers for both questions.

Gregory Clark, an economic historian at the University of California,
Davis, believes that the Industrial Revolution — the surge in economic
growth that occurred first in England around 1800 — occurred because
of a change in the nature of the human population. The change was one
in which people gradually developed the strange new behaviors required
to make a modern economy work. The middle-class values of nonviolence,
literacy, long working hours and a willingness to save emerged only
recently in human history, Dr. Clark argues.

Because they grew more common in the centuries before 1800, whether by
cultural transmission or evolutionary adaptation, the English
population at last became productive enough to escape from poverty,
followed quickly by other countries with the same long agrarian past.

Dr. Clark's ideas have been circulating in articles and manuscripts
for several years and are to be published as a book next month, "A
Farewell to Alms" (Princeton University Press). Economic historians
have high praise for his thesis, though many disagree with parts of
it.

"This is a great book and deserves attention," said Philip Hoffman, a
historian at the California Institute of Technology. He described it
as "delightfully provocative" and a "real challenge" to the prevailing
school of thought that it is institutions that shape economic history.

Samuel Bowles, an economist who studies cultural evolution at the
Santa Fe Institute, said Dr. Clark's work was "great historical
sociology and, unlike the sociology of the past, is informed by modern
economic theory."

[huh?]

The basis of Dr. Clark's work is his recovery of data from which he
can reconstruct many features of the English economy from 1200 to
1800. From this data, he shows, far more clearly than has been
possible before, that the economy was locked in a Malthusian trap _ —
each time new technology increased the efficiency of production a
little, the population grew, the extra mouths ate up the surplus, and
average income fell back to its former level.

This income was pitifully low in terms of the amount of wheat it could
buy. By 1790, the average person's consumption in England was still
just 2,322 calories a day, with the poor eating a mere 1,508. Living
hunter-gatherer societies enjoy diets of 2,300 calories or more.

"Primitive man ate well compared with one of the richest societies in
the world in 1800," Dr. Clark observes.

The tendency of population to grow faster than the food supply,
keeping most people at the edge of starvation, was described by Thomas
Malthus in a 1798 book, "An Essay on the Principle of Population."
This Malthusian trap, Dr. Clark's data show, governed the English
economy from 1200 until the Industrial Revolution and has in his view
probably constrained humankind throughout its existence. The only
respite was during disasters like the Black Death, when population
plummeted, and for several generations the survivors had more to eat.

[it's ironic that Malthus' theory got so much attention almost
precisely at the time when it lost all validity. Of course, it had
been invented a century or two earlier.]

Malthus's book is well known because it gave Darwin the idea of
natural selection. Reading of the struggle for existence that Malthus
predicted, Darwin wrote in his autobiography, "It at once struck me
that under these circumstances favourable variations would tend to be
preserved, and unfavourable ones to be destroyed. ... Here then I had
at last got a theory by which to work."

Given that the English economy operated under Malthusian constraints,
might it not have responded in some way to the forces of natural
selection that Darwin had divined would flourish in such conditions?
Dr. Clark started to wonder whether natural selection had indeed
changed the nature of the population in some way and, if so, whether
this might be the missing explanation for the Industrial Revolution.

The Industrial Revolution, the first escape from the Malthusian trap,
occurred when the efficiency of production at last accelerated,
growing fast enough to outpace population growth and allow average
incomes to rise. Many explanations have been offered for this spurt in
efficiency, some economic and some political, but none is fully
satisfactory, historians say.

Dr. Clark's first thought was that the population might have evolved
greater resistance to disease. The idea came from Jared Diamond's book
"Guns, Germs and Steel," which argues that Europeans were able to
conquer other nations in part because of their greater immunity to
disease.

[the stuff about germs wasn't Diamond's theory.]

In support of the disease-resistance idea, cities like London were so
filthy and disease ridden that a third of their populations died off
every generation, and the losses were restored by immigrants from the
countryside. That suggested to Dr. Clark that the surviving population
of England might be the descendants of peasants.

A way to test the idea, he realized, was through analysis of ancient
wills, which might reveal a connection between wealth and the number
of progeny. The wills did that, , but in quite the opposite direction
to what he had expected.

Generation after generation, the rich had more surviving children than
the poor, his research showed. That meant there must have been
constant downward social mobility as the poor failed to reproduce
themselves and the progeny of the rich took over their occupations.
"The modern population of the English is largely descended from the
economic upper classes of the Middle Ages," he concluded.

As the progeny of the rich pervaded all levels of society, Dr. Clark
considered, the behaviors that made for wealth could have spread with
them. He has documented that several aspects of what might now be
called middle-class values changed significantly from the days of
hunter gatherer societies to 1800. Work hours increased, literacy and
numeracy rose, and the level of interpersonal violence dropped.

Another significant change in behavior, Dr. Clark argues, was an
increase in people's preference for saving over instant consumption,
which he sees reflected in the steady decline in interest rates from
1200 to 1800.

[nonsense!]

"Thrift, prudence, negotiation and hard work were becoming values for
communities that previously had been spendthrift, impulsive, violent
and leisure loving," Dr. Clark writes.

Around 1790, a steady upward trend in production efficiency first
emerges in the English economy. It was this significant acceleration
in the rate of productivity growth that at last made possible
England's escape from the Malthusian trap and the emergence of the
Industrial Revolution.

In the rest of Europe and East Asia, populations had also long been
shaped by the Malthusian trap of their stable agrarian economies.
Their workforces easily absorbed the new production technologies that
appeared first in England.

It is puzzling that the Industrial Revolution did not occur first in
the much larger populations of China or Japan. Dr. Clark has found
data showing that their richer classes, the Samurai in Japan and the
Qing dynasty in China, were surprisingly unfertile and so would have
failed to generate the downward social mobility that spread
production-oriented values in England.

After the Industrial Revolution, the gap in living standards between
the richest and the poorest countries started to accelerate, from a
wealth disparity of about 4 to 1 in 1800 to more than 50 to 1 today.
Just as there is no agreed explanation for the Industrial Revolution,
economists cannot account well for the divergence between rich and
poor nations or they would have better remedies to offer.

[gee, what ever happened to imperialism?]

Many commentators point to a failure of political and social
institutions as the reason that poor countries remain poor. But the
proposed medicine of institutional reform "has failed repeatedly to
cure the patient," Dr. Clark writes. He likens the "cult centers" of
the World Bank and International Monetary Fund to prescientific
physicians who prescribed bloodletting for ailments they did not
understand.

[interesting.]

If the Industrial Revolution was caused by changes in people's
behavior, then populations that have not had time to adapt to the
Malthusian constraints of agrarian economies will not be able to
achieve the same production efficiencies, his thesis implies.

Dr. Clark says the middle-class values needed for productivity could
have been transmitted either culturally or genetically. But in some
passages, he seems to lean toward evolution as the explanation.
"Through the long agrarian passage leading up to the Industrial
Revolution, man was becoming biologically more adapted to the modern
economic world," he writes. And, "The triumph of capitalism in the
modern world thus may lie as much in our genes as in ideology or
rationality."

[but cultural evolution works much faster than genetic evolution]

What was being inherited, in his view, was not greater intelligence —
being a hunter in a foraging society requires considerably greater
skill than the repetitive actions of an agricultural laborer. Rather,
it was "a repertoire of skills and dispositions that were very
different from those of the pre-agrarian world."

Reaction to Dr. Clark's thesis from other economic historians seems
largely favorable, although few agree with all of it, and many are
skeptical of the most novel part, his suggestion that evolutionary
change is a factor to be considered in history.

Historians used to accept changes in people's behavior as an
explanation for economic events, like Max Weber's thesis linking the
rise of capitalism with Protestantism. But most have now swung to the
economists' view that all people are alike and will respond in the
same way to the same incentives. Hence they seek to explain events
like the Industrial Revolution in terms of changes in institutions,
not people.

Dr. Clark's view is that institutions and incentives have been much
the same all along and explain very little, which is why there is so
little agreement on the causes of the Industrial Revolution. In saying
the answer lies in people's behavior, he is asking his fellow economic
historians to revert to a type of explanation they had mostly
abandoned and in addition is evoking an idea that historians seldom
consider as an explanatory variable, that of evolution.

Most historians have assumed that [genetic] evolutionary change is too
gradual to have affected human populations in the historical period.
But geneticists, with information from the human genome now at their
disposal, have begun to detect ever more recent instances of human
evolutionary change like the spread of lactose tolerance in
cattle-raising people of northern Europe just 5,000 years ago. A study
in the current American Journal of Human Genetics finds evidence of
natural selection at work in the population of Puerto Rico since 1513.
So historians are likely to be more enthusiastic about the medieval
economic data and elaborate time series that Dr. Clark has
reconstructed than about his suggestion that people adapted to the
Malthusian constraints of an agrarian society.

"He deserves kudos for assembling all this data," said Dr. Hoffman,
the Caltech historian, "but I don't agree with his underlying
argument."

The decline in English interest rates, for example, could have been
caused by the state's providing better domestic security and enforcing
property rights, Dr. Hoffman said, not by a change in people's
willingness to save, as Dr. Clark asserts.

The natural-selection part of Dr. Clark's argument "is significantly
weaker, and maybe just not necessary, if you can trace the changes in
the institutions," said Kenneth L. Pomeranz, a historian at the
University of California, Irvine. In a recent book, "The Great
Divergence," Dr. Pomeranz argues that tapping new sources of energy
like coal and bringing new land into cultivation, as in the North
American colonies, were the productivity advances that pushed the old
agrarian economies out of their Malthusian constraints.

Robert P. [Dr. Bob] Brenner, a historian at the University of
California, Los Angeles, said although there was no satisfactory
explanation at present for why economic growth took off in Europe
around 1800, he believed that institutional explanations would provide
the answer and that Dr. Clark's idea of genes for capitalist behavior
was "quite a speculative leap."

Dr. Bowles, the Santa Fe economist, said he was "not averse to the
idea" that genetic transmission of capitalist values is important
[!!!], but that the evidence for it was not yet there. "It's just that
we don't have any idea what it is, and everything we look at ends up
being awfully small," he said. Tests of most social behaviors show
they are very weakly heritable.

He also took issue with Dr. Clark's suggestion that the unwillingness
to postpone consumption, called time preference by economists, had
changed in people over the centuries. "If I were as poor as the people
who take out payday loans, I might also have a high time preference,"
he said.

Dr. Clark said he set out to write his book 12 years ago on
discovering that his undergraduates knew nothing about the history of
Europe. His colleagues have been surprised by its conclusions but also
interested in them, he said.

"The actual data underlying this stuff is hard to dispute," Dr. Clark
said. "When people see the logic, they say 'I don't necessarily
believe it, but it's hard to dismiss.' "
-- 
Jim Devine / "Segui il tuo corso, e lascia dir le genti." (Go your own
way and let people talk.) --  Karl, paraphrasing Dante.

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