The Neolithic Revolution from a Price-Theoretic Perspective

Publikation: Working paperForskning

Standard

The Neolithic Revolution from a Price-Theoretic Perspective. / Guzmán, Ricardo Andrés; Weisdorf, Jacob Louis.

2010.

Publikation: Working paperForskning

Harvard

Guzmán, RA & Weisdorf, JL 2010 'The Neolithic Revolution from a Price-Theoretic Perspective'.

APA

Guzmán, R. A., & Weisdorf, J. L. (2010). The Neolithic Revolution from a Price-Theoretic Perspective.

Vancouver

Guzmán RA, Weisdorf JL. The Neolithic Revolution from a Price-Theoretic Perspective. 2010.

Author

Guzmán, Ricardo Andrés ; Weisdorf, Jacob Louis. / The Neolithic Revolution from a Price-Theoretic Perspective. 2010.

Bibtex

@techreport{8d2aa0d009a111df825d000ea68e967b,
title = "The Neolithic Revolution from a Price-Theoretic Perspective",
abstract = "The adoption of agriculture during the Neolithic triggered the first demographic explosion in history. When fertility returned to its original level, early farmers found themselves more poorly nourished than hunter-gatherers and working longer hours to make ends meet. We develop a dynamic, price-theoretic model that rationalizes these events: in the short-run, fertility and utility increase; in the long-run, consumption, leisure, and utility fall below their initial levels. This, we argue, can be attributed to the rise in child labor productivity that followed the adoption of agriculture. Counter-intuitively, an increase in the productivity of children may lead to a permanent reduction in utility.",
keywords = "Faculty of Social Sciences, Neolithic revolution, hunter-gatherers, child labor, Thomas Malthus",
author = "Guzm{\'a}n, {Ricardo Andr{\'e}s} and Weisdorf, {Jacob Louis}",
year = "2010",
language = "English",
type = "WorkingPaper",

}

RIS

TY - UNPB

T1 - The Neolithic Revolution from a Price-Theoretic Perspective

AU - Guzmán, Ricardo Andrés

AU - Weisdorf, Jacob Louis

PY - 2010

Y1 - 2010

N2 - The adoption of agriculture during the Neolithic triggered the first demographic explosion in history. When fertility returned to its original level, early farmers found themselves more poorly nourished than hunter-gatherers and working longer hours to make ends meet. We develop a dynamic, price-theoretic model that rationalizes these events: in the short-run, fertility and utility increase; in the long-run, consumption, leisure, and utility fall below their initial levels. This, we argue, can be attributed to the rise in child labor productivity that followed the adoption of agriculture. Counter-intuitively, an increase in the productivity of children may lead to a permanent reduction in utility.

AB - The adoption of agriculture during the Neolithic triggered the first demographic explosion in history. When fertility returned to its original level, early farmers found themselves more poorly nourished than hunter-gatherers and working longer hours to make ends meet. We develop a dynamic, price-theoretic model that rationalizes these events: in the short-run, fertility and utility increase; in the long-run, consumption, leisure, and utility fall below their initial levels. This, we argue, can be attributed to the rise in child labor productivity that followed the adoption of agriculture. Counter-intuitively, an increase in the productivity of children may lead to a permanent reduction in utility.

KW - Faculty of Social Sciences

KW - Neolithic revolution

KW - hunter-gatherers

KW - child labor

KW - Thomas Malthus

M3 - Working paper

BT - The Neolithic Revolution from a Price-Theoretic Perspective

ER -

ID: 17214772