Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/10419/171529 
Year of Publication: 
2008
Series/Report no.: 
Economics Working Paper Series No. 08/86
Publisher: 
ETH Zurich, CER-ETH - Center of Economic Research, Zurich
Abstract: 
We explore the relation between historical population density in former colonies and modern income distribution. A theoretical model highlights the potentially opposing effects of native population density on incentives for colonists to conquer or settle in new territories. While an abundant supply of native labor is an “asset” that drives up land rents, it is also a “liability” that makes land acquisition by colonists more difficult and reduces returns to peacable migration. Conflicts over land, sowing the seeds for inequality by creating a landed élite living off rents, are especially likely to emerge for intermediate native population densities. Results are confirmed by detailed empirical tests highlighting the curvilinear relationship between native population density and modern income inequality. Finally, using population density as an instrument for inequality in the former colonies, we demonstrate that there is no causal relationship running from income distribution to economic growth.
Subjects: 
inequality
growth
factor endowments
population density
conflict
colonization
JEL: 
O15
N30
N50
Persistent Identifier of the first edition: 
Document Type: 
Working Paper

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