Guns, Germs, and Slaves: an Alternative View of the Colonial Origins of Comparative Development
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Abstract
This paper shows that early colonial interactions between Europeans and indigenous populations, specifically the deaths of the latter, have long-term effects on economic development. We propose an alternative view on the historical origins of comparative development, arguing for links between pre-colonial conditions, colonial-era practices, and growth centuries later. We explore the decades of first contact between Europeans and the indigenous population for both violence against that population and the type of political-economic regime established. These violence and regime consequences affected the strength or weakness of property-protecting institutions, with the latter in turn influencing per capita income today. JEL: O43, O47, N40
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- last seen: 2026-05-20T01:45:00.602351+00:00