Longterm Barriers to Economic Development

Working Paper: CEPR ID: DP9638

Authors: Enrico Spolaore; Romain Wacziarg

Abstract: What obstacles prevent the most productive technologies from spreading to less developed economies from the world?'s technological frontier? In this paper, we seek to shed light on this question by quantifying the geographic and human barriers to the transmission of technologies. We argue that the intergenerational transmission of human traits, particularly culturally transmitted traits, has led to divergence between populations over the course of history. In turn, this divergence has introduced barriers to the diffusion of technologies across societies. We provide measures of historical and genealogical distances between populations, and document how such distances, relative to the world'?s technological frontier, act as barriers to the diffusion of development and of specific innovations. We provide an interpretation of these results in the context of an emerging literature seeking to understand variation in economic development as the result of factors rooted deep in history.

Keywords: Diffusion of Innovations; Genetic Distance; Intergenerational Transmission; Longrun Growth

JEL Codes: O11; O33; O40; O57


Causal Claims Network Graph

Edges that are evidenced by causal inference methods are in orange, and the rest are in light blue.


Causal Claims

CauseEffect
Genealogical distance between populations (J11)Differentiation of vertically transmitted traits (J62)
Differentiation of vertically transmitted traits (J62)Barriers to the diffusion of technologies (O33)
Genealogical distance between populations (J11)Barriers to the diffusion of technologies (O33)
Genetic distance relative to the technological frontier (O49)Income differences across countries (F40)
Genetic distance (C29)Income differences across countries (F40)
Genetic distance (C29)Barriers to technological diffusion (O33)
Barriers to technological diffusion (O33)Income differences between societies (D31)

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